2020
DOI: 10.1002/cfp2.1101
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How Americans used their COVID‐19 economic impact payments

Abstract: This study investigates how Americans used their CARES Act Economic Impact Payments (EIP) for their spending needs, spending wants, and financial transactions. The results from a sample of 1,172 Amazon MTurk users collected in July 2020 suggest that EIP use varied across spending and financial transaction categories. Those with job instability, less financial resources, and more people to care for received essential support. A smaller proportion of the population spent at least some of their EIP on their wants… Show more

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Cited by 9 publications
(33 citation statements)
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References 39 publications
(49 reference statements)
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“…Therefore, it is critical to account for fundamental differences in sociodemographic and economic conditions when investigating stimulus payment use. Researchers have conducted emerging research to investigate how individuals spent their 2020 CARES Act EIP (Asebedo et al, 2020 ; Baker et al, 2020 ; Chetty et al, 2020 ; Coibion et al, 2020 ; Li et al, 2020 ). Specifically, Asebedo et al ( 2020 ) found that those with a lesser net worth (compared to high net worth) allocated less of their EIP to financial transactions, more of their EIP to debt repayment in addition to spending needs and wants.…”
Section: Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Therefore, it is critical to account for fundamental differences in sociodemographic and economic conditions when investigating stimulus payment use. Researchers have conducted emerging research to investigate how individuals spent their 2020 CARES Act EIP (Asebedo et al, 2020 ; Baker et al, 2020 ; Chetty et al, 2020 ; Coibion et al, 2020 ; Li et al, 2020 ). Specifically, Asebedo et al ( 2020 ) found that those with a lesser net worth (compared to high net worth) allocated less of their EIP to financial transactions, more of their EIP to debt repayment in addition to spending needs and wants.…”
Section: Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Researchers have conducted emerging research to investigate how individuals spent their 2020 CARES Act EIP (Asebedo et al, 2020 ; Baker et al, 2020 ; Chetty et al, 2020 ; Coibion et al, 2020 ; Li et al, 2020 ). Specifically, Asebedo et al ( 2020 ) found that those with a lesser net worth (compared to high net worth) allocated less of their EIP to financial transactions, more of their EIP to debt repayment in addition to spending needs and wants. Asebedo et al’s findings are consistent with studies that found lower-income households facing liquidity constraints were more likely to spend their EIP, as well as other recent research about EIP spending among low-income households (Baker et al, 2020 ; Chetty et al, 2020 ; Coibion et al, 2020 ).…”
Section: Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
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