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Risk Loving and Fat Tails in the Wealth Distribution

Staff Report 662 | Published December 23, 2024

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Authors

Aloisio Araujo IMPA and EPGE/FGV
Juan Pablo Gama Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais
Timothy J. Kehoe Consultant, University of Minnesota, and National Bureau of Economic Research
Risk Loving and Fat Tails in the Wealth Distribution

Abstract

We study the dynamic properties of the wealth distribution in an overlapping generations model with warm-glow bequests and heterogeneous attitudes towards risk. Some dynasties of agents are risk averters, and others are risk lovers. Agents can invest in two types of Lucas trees. The two types of trees are symmetric in the sense that one type has a high return in states where the other has a return of zero. This symmetry allows risk averters to perfectly ensure their future income and eliminates aggregate uncertainty in the model. Furthermore, risk lovers take extreme portfolio positions, which make it easy for us to characterize the evolution of their wealth holdings over time. We show that the model has an equilibrium in which the aggregate wealth distribution converges to a unique invariant distribution. The invariant distribution of wealth of the risk lovers has fat tails for high bequest rates. The existence of fat tails is endogenously generated by the behavior of risk lovers rather than by the exogenous existence of fat tails in the endowments or in the returns of the assets.