F. Firoozi, EXTERNAL DEBT, TIME PREFERENCE, AND NONTRADED GOODS IN A 2-SECTOR DYNAMIC-MODEL OF CONSUMPTION, Open economies review, 6(2), 1995, pp. 167-178
A number of studies have indicated that one of the consequences of a d
evelopment process is a rise in the consumers' subjective time prefere
nce rate (discount rate). This study first shows that many of the adve
rse economic observations in developing countries can emerge from a ri
se in the discount rate. It then demonstrates that the extent of such
adverse effects is related to relative shares of the tradable and nont
radable sectors in aggregate consumption. A result is that the aggrega
te dissaving generated by a rise in the discount rate is smaller when
the economy's nontradable sector is relatively larger. The results add
new dimensions to the allocation policies applied by international le
nding institutions in developing economies.