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Spend as you were told: Evidence from labeled COVID-19 stimulus payments in South Korea

•We test the income fungibility assumption from standard economic theory by exploiting unique policy rules of South Korea’s labeled COVID-19 stimulus payments.•Using data on card transactions in Seoul, we find that households do not consider stimulus payments fungible.•Our results imply that labeled...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Journal of public economics 2023-05, Vol.221, p.104867, Article 104867
Main Authors: Kim, Seonghoon, Koh, Kanghyock, Lyou, Wonjun
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:•We test the income fungibility assumption from standard economic theory by exploiting unique policy rules of South Korea’s labeled COVID-19 stimulus payments.•Using data on card transactions in Seoul, we find that households do not consider stimulus payments fungible.•Our results imply that labeled stimulus payments with usage restrictions can boost household consumption spending in targeted sectors or locations during economic recessions. We test the income fungibility assumption from standard economic theory by analyzing spending responses to South Korea’s labeled COVID-19 stimulus payments. We exploit unique policy rules for identification: (1) recipients cannot use payments outside their province of residence, and (2) they can only use payments at establishments in pre-specified sectors. Using data on card transactions in Seoul, we find that households do not consider stimulus payments fungible. Compared to Seoul residents’ benchmark spending responses to cash income gains by sector, the stimulus payments disproportionately increased Seoul residents’ spending in the allowed sector compared to the non-allowed sector. The payments did not increase non-Seoul residents’ card spending. Our results imply that labeled stimulus payments with usage restrictions can boost household consumption spending in targeted sectors or locations during economic recessions.
ISSN:0047-2727
1879-2316
DOI:10.1016/j.jpubeco.2023.104867