The Consumption Risk of the Stock Market
Brookings Papers on Economic Activity, 2 (2001) 279-348.
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1. If one does not make the assumption of joint lognormality and performs GMM, estimated coefficients of relative risk aversion may or may not decline as one increases the consumption growth horizon. This is driven by the difficult to interpret GMM first-order condition and the sensitivity of GMM (starting values matter for example), rather than, as I worried when I discovered this, the assumption of lognormality. To see this, calculate the robust measure analogous to that in my BPEA article: the covariance of returns and the (nonlinear) stochastic discount factor, as a function of risk aversion. The risk of the stock market increases with horizon; magnitudes change, but my finding does not depend on the approximation that returns and consumption growth are jointly log-normal. See my March 2002 note on this with results.