Score contribution per author:
α: calibrated so average coauthorship-adjusted count equals average raw count
George Katona (1960) introduced the distinction between ability to buy and willingness to buy. Ability to buy refers to the objective factors determining actual purchases whereas willingness to buy captures subjective factors such as attitudes or moods. I show that Katona's theory can be reconciled easily with standard models of intertemporal utility maximization if one allows for a time-varying preference parameter that is exogenous to the consumer and determined by the social environment. Such a willingness-to-consume model is tested against standard alternatives using data from seven European countries. The empirical evidence rejects the permanent income hypothesis and supports the willingness-to-consume model.