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Abstract
Most studies of household intertemporal consumption behavior use food consumption data from the Panel Study of Income Dynamics (PSID). A natural question is whether the intertemporal behavior of food consumption is typical of overall consumption. I address this question by examining the time-series behavior of food and other consumption series at the aggregate level. Unfortunately, I find that food is not typical: the life cycle-permanent income hypothesis can be easily rejected for most aggregate consumption series, but not for food. This suggests that tests of the LCH/PIH using PSID data are likely to have low power