Liquidity Constraints and Consumer Bankruptcy: Evidence from Tax Rebates

Tal Gross, Matthew J. Notowidigdo, Jialan Wang

NBER Working Paper No. 17807
Issued in February 2012
NBER Program(s):Public Economics

This paper estimates the extent to which legal fees prevent liquidity-constrained households from declaring bankruptcy. To do so, it studies how the 2001 and 2008 tax rebates affected consumer bankruptcy filings. We exploit the randomized timing of the rebate checks and estimate that the rebates caused a significant, short-run increase in consumer bankruptcies in both years, with larger effects in 2008 when the rebates were more generous and more widely distributed. Using hand-collected data from individual bankruptcy petitions, we document that the rebates caused an increase in the average liabilities and the liabilities-to-income ratios of filers.

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Document Object Identifier (DOI): 10.3386/w17807

Published: “Liquidity Constraints and Consumer Bankruptcy: Evidence from Tax Rebates,” with Matthew Notowidigdo and Jialan Wang. Review of Economics and Statistics, accepted. Manuscript. Appendix. Featured in the June 2012 NBER Digest Media Coverage: Los Angeles Times; Huffington Post; Vox; Forbes; CNN. Older Version: NBER Working Paper #17807 citation courtesy of