We study the impact of a minimum consumption requirement on the rate of
economic growth and the evolution of wealth distribution. The requirement
introduces a positive dependence between the intertemporal elasticity of
substitution and household wealth. This dependence implies a transition
phase during which the growth rate of per-capita quantities rise toward
their steady-state values and the distributions of wealth, consumption, and
permanent income become more unequal. We calibrate the minimum consumption
requirement to match estimates available for a sample of Indian villagers
and find that these transitional effects are quantitatively significant and
depend importantly on the economy's steady-state growth rate.