In this paper, we study the role of habit formation in accounting for the
joint behavior of the real interest rate and consumption growth following a
monetary policy shock. A VAR estimation on US data shows that following a
contractionary monetary policy shock, the real interest rate exhibits a
persistent increase while consumption growth drops persistently. As the
standard permanent income model is known to be unable to replicate this
co–movement for intertemporal substitution motives, we introduce habit
persistence in consumption behavior. We test the implied Euler equation
using a method of moments on conditional moments (IRF) obtained from the VAR
model. Our estimates of the habit persistence parameter are similar to
previous results in the literature. Further, we find empirical support in
favor of habit formation as a relevant assumption to represent the joint
behavior of the real interest rate and consumption growth following a
monetary policy shock. Finally, we show that habit formation allows
weakening the intertemporal substitution mechanism.