“…9 Battistin [2004], , and Battistin and Padula [2009] have documented that the gap between the Personal Consumption Expenditure and CES nondurable consumption data has been growing since 1990. 10 See for example, Baker [1997], Gottschalk [1997] Moffitt and Gottschalk [1994, Katz and Autor [1999], Blundell and Pistaferri [2003], Gyourko and Tracy [2003], Storesletten et al [2004], , Krueger and Perri [2006], , Davis and Kahn [2008], Gordon and Dew-Becker [2008], Keys [2008], Primiceri andvanRens [2009], Heathcote [2009]. 11 It is possible to come up with examples where inequality is rising in the society, but volatility is zero or unchanged, and vice versa.…”