1,631 results on '"INCOME SHARES"'
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2. Pakistan and Bangladesh: A Dream Sundered
- Author
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Norton, Roger D. and Norton, Roger D.
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- 2022
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3. Race Matters: Income Shares, Income Inequality, and Income Mobility for All U.S. Races
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Akee, Randall, Jones, Maggie R, and Porter, Sonya R
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Human Society ,Demography ,Clinical Research ,Reduced Inequalities ,Adult ,Black or African American ,Asian People ,Ethnicity ,Female ,Hispanic or Latino ,Humans ,Income ,Indians ,North American ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Racial Groups ,Social Mobility ,United States ,White People ,Income inequality ,Income shares ,Income mobility ,Race ,Administrative data ,Human resources and industrial relations - Abstract
Using unique linked data, we examine income inequality and mobility across racial and ethnic groups in the United States. Our data encompass the universe of income tax filers in the United States for the period 2000-2014, matched with individual-level race and ethnicity information from multiple censuses and American Community Survey data. We document both income inequality and mobility trends over the period. We find significant stratification in terms of average incomes by racial/ethnic group and distinct differences in within-group income inequality. The groups with the highest incomes-whites and Asians-also have the highest levels of within-group inequality and the lowest levels of within-group mobility. The reverse is true for the lowest-income groups: blacks, American Indians, and Hispanics have lower within-group inequality and immobility. On the other hand, low-income groups are also highly immobile in terms of overall, rather than within-group, mobility. These same groups also have a higher probability of experiencing downward mobility compared with whites and Asians. We also find that within-group income inequality increased for all groups between 2000 and 2014, and the increase was especially large for whites. The picture that emerges from our analysis is of a rigid income structure, with mainly whites and Asians positioned at the top and blacks, American Indians, and Hispanics confined to the bottom.
- Published
- 2019
4. The 'Forgotten' middle class: An analysis of the effects of globalisation.
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Pleninger, Regina, de Haan, Jakob, and Sturm, Jan‐Egbert
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MIDDLE class ,GLOBALIZATION ,ECONOMIC globalization ,HIGH-income countries ,MIDDLE-income countries - Abstract
This paper studies the effects of globalisation on the income share of the middle class. Our findings suggest that globalisation, proxied by the KOF Economic Globalization Index, reduces the income share of the middle class. The income share of the poorest 20% also drops due to globalisation, while that of the richest 20% increases. We find that only de facto and not de jure measures of globalisation have statistically significant effects on income shares and inequality. Our results are robust for alternative definitions of the middle‐class income share and hold for trade and financial globalisation. When we distinguish between groups of countries, we find that our main result is driven by low‐ and middle‐income countries; for high‐income countries, we do not find evidence that globalisation has an effect on the income share of the middle class. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2022
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5. Labor-augmenting technical change and the wage share: New microeconomic foundations.
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Tavani, Daniele and Zamparelli, Luca
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LABOR productivity , *CAPITAL stock , *INCOME inequality , *WAGES , *LABOR costs , *WAGE increases - Abstract
• Microfoundation of endogenous labor productivity growth. • Labor productivity growth is an increasing function of the wage share. • Endogenous labor productivity growth affects the stability of the growth cycle. • Convergence to the stable equilibrium can be monotonic or cyclical. An important question in alternative economic theories has to do with the relationship between the functional income distribution and the growth rate of labor productivity. According to both the induced innovation hypothesis and Marx-biased technical change, labor productivity growth should be an increasing function of the wage share. In this paper, we first discuss the shortcomings of both theories and then provide a novel microeconomic foundation for a direct relationship between the wage share and labor productivity growth. The result arises because of profit-seeking behavior by capitalist firms that face a trade-off between investing in new capital stock and innovating to save on labor costs. Embedding this finding in the Goodwin (1967) growth cycle model, we show that the resulting steady state is locally stable. We also numerically evaluate the persistence (or lack thereof) of growth cycles for varying elasticities of innovation to R&D spending and investment rates. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
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6. Monetary Policy, Market Structure and the Income Shares in the U.S.
- Author
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Bitros, George C.
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MONETARY policy ,MARKET design & structure (Economics) ,INCOME ,ECONOMIC equilibrium ,ECONOMIC competition - Abstract
A general equilibrium model of heterogeneous capital is employed to investigate whether, how and to what extent monetary policy and market structure may have contributed to the decline of the labor share in the U.S. in recent decades. By construction the model allows monetary policy to affect the labor share through two channels, i.e. one linking the policy rate to the real interest rate and another linking the latter to the useful life of producers’ goods, whereas regarding market structure, the more competitive the economy, the higher the labor share. From its solution using U.S. data over the period 2000-2014 it emerges that the persistent reduction in the policy rate on the one hand slowed down the decline in the labor share and on the other accelerated it, because the reduction in the policy rate was accompanied by a robust upward trend in the equilibrium real rate of interest, which increased the useful life of producers’ goods. In turn, to gauge the relative strength of these two opposite effects, the equation of the labor share is estimated by means of the autoregressive distributed lag method. The results show that the adverse effect of monetary policy through the useful life of producers’ goods was more than 12 times as strong as the favorable effect of the policy rate and on this ground I conclude that the monetary policy contributed to the decline of the labor share significantly, at least since 2000. As for the market structure, it is found that even if firms had and attempted to exercise monopoly power, it would be exceedingly difficult to exploit it because the demand of consumers’ goods is significantly price elastic. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2018
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7. On the causes of the changes in income shares: Some reflections in the light the United States experience.
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Stirati, Antonella
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INCOME inequality ,RATE of return ,FINANCIAL performance ,DISTRIBUTION (Economic theory) ,CAPITAL investments - Abstract
The last 30 years have witnessed a dramatic change in the distribution of income, with the wage share falling in all major industrialized countries. Main-stream analyses, including New Keynesian ones, which retain the notion of factor substitution leading to a “factor intensity” inversely related to its rate of return, have encountered some difficulties in the interpretation of this change. Nonmainstream approaches present an advantage in the explanation of the phenomenon, consisting in the fact that they entail no a priori connections between the changes in distribution and the changes factor proportions. Hence if a change in institutions or in the bargaining strength of the parties affects distribution, income shares may vary significantly (i.e., changes in wages need not be accompanied by changes in labor to output ratio in the opposite direction as in mainstream analyses). Yet empirical observation may question also some of the analyses that have been advanced outside the mainstream. The article will explore the ways in which nonmainstream approaches have interpreted the described changes in distribution, and assess them from an analytical viewpoint and with reference to U.S. data. The purpose is that of pointing at some open questions and problems. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2018
- Full Text
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8. Productive government expenditure and its impact on income inequality: evidence from international panel data
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Stephen J. Turnovsky and Iñaki Erauskin
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Income shares ,Government ,Endogenous growth theory ,Economic inequality ,Gini coefficient ,Economics ,Demographic economics ,Government expenditure ,Investment (macroeconomics) ,General Economics, Econometrics and Finance ,Panel data - Abstract
This paper addresses the impact of productive government expenditure on income inequality using a dataset of 80 countries over the period of 1980–2015. It incorporates the conflicting predictions implied by alternative growth models on this issue. While the neoclassical model suggests that productive government expenditure will reduce long-run income inequality, the corresponding endogenous growth model suggests the opposite. We examine this proposition, by considering both the aggregate Gini coefficient, and the income shares of quintiles. The results obtained using the Gini coefficients provide compelling support for the contrasting impacts of government investment on income inequality, suggested by the underlying theoretical models. These findings are supported, albeit somewhat more weakly by the regressions employing the quintile data. Our general conclusion is that government investment has a mixed effect on income inequality, a conclusion consistent with previous studies.
- Published
- 2021
9. Assessment of the possibility of extra-budgetary funds including in the income distribution from unified treasury account funds management
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M. L. Dorofeev
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ComputingMilieux_LEGALASPECTSOFCOMPUTING ,Legislation ,HM401-1281 ,Federal budget ,treasury department ,unified treasury account ,budget flows ,liquidity management ,budget revenues ,fund balance management ,Revenue ,Sociology (General) ,revenue administration ,HB71-74 ,Finance ,Income shares ,business.industry ,pension fund of russia ,pensions ,Liquidity risk ,Treasury ,Economics as a science ,Deficit spending ,federal budget ,public finance ,Business ,Public finance - Abstract
The modern specifics of the temporarily free funds management on Unified Treasury Account of the Federal budget have been analysed. The assessment of the possibility and expediency of using of the income part received from the management of these funds to transfer to the Pension Fund of Russia budget as an additional factor in balancing its income and expenditure obligations, – has been made. An analysis of the current legislation has shown that the Pension Fund of Russia is not included in the number of recipients of income shares from managing balances on a single treasury account. In this regard, an estimate of the approximate amount of income from managing balances on a single treasury account based on open data has been made. It is proposed to include the Pension Fund of Russia in process of distributing these revenues since their value is sufficient to cover up to 10 % of the budget deficit of the Pension Fund of Russia.
- Published
- 2021
10. Impact of the 2008 Recession on Wealth-Adjusted Income and Inequality for U.S. Cohorts
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Stephen Crystal and Naomi Zewde
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Home equity ,Social Psychology ,Inequality ,Financial asset ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Population ,Recession ,Cohort Studies ,Economics ,Humans ,education ,THE JOURNAL OF GERONTOLOGY: Social Sciences ,media_common ,Family Characteristics ,Income shares ,education.field_of_study ,Gini coefficient ,Adjusted gross income ,Clinical Psychology ,Economic Recession ,Socioeconomic Factors ,Income ,Educational Status ,Demographic economics ,Geriatrics and Gerontology ,Gerontology - Abstract
Objective To examine the distributional effects of the 2008 recession and subsequent recovery across generational cohorts. Methods Using data from the Survey of Consumer Finances (2007–2016), we constructed a measure of economic well-being accounting for income, household size, and annuitized value of assets. We examine trajectories of adjusted income and inequality, using Gini coefficients and income shares by decile, for the overall population and by cohort during the recession and recovery. Results Inequality declined temporarily during the recession, but reached new highs during the recovery. During recovery, population-level increases in economic resources were not reflected among below-median households, as the more concentrated financial assets rose while broader-based home equity and employment fell or remained stagnant. Inequality measures increased for cohorts in their primary working years (Generation-X and Baby Boomers), but not among the younger Millennials, who were at early stages of education, workforce entry, and household formation. Discussion The study illustrates an integrative approach to analyzing cumulative dis/advantage by considering interactions between historically consistent macrolevel events, such as economic shocks or policy choices affecting all cohorts, and the persistent life-course processes that tend to increase heterogeneity and inequality as cohorts age over time. Although recovery policies led to rapid recovery of financial asset values, they did not proportionately reach those below the median or their economic resource types. Results suggest that in a high-inequality environment, recovery policies from economic shocks may need tailoring to all levels of resources in order to achieve more equitable recovery outcomes and prevent exacerbating cohort inequality trajectories.
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- 2021
11. Inequality Measurement with Grouped Data: Parametric and Non-Parametric Methods
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José María Sarabia, Vanesa Jordá, and Markus Jäntti
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Statistics and Probability ,Economics and Econometrics ,Income shares ,Inequality ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Nonparametric statistics ,Grouped data ,Economic inequality ,Econometrics ,Statistics, Probability and Uncertainty ,Social Sciences (miscellaneous) ,Mathematics ,Parametric statistics ,media_common - Abstract
Grouped data in the form of income shares have conventionally been used to estimate income inequality due to the lack of individual records. We present a systematic evaluation of the performance of parametric distributions and non-parametric techniques to estimate economic inequality using more than 3300 data sets. We also provide guidance on the choice between these two approaches and their estimation, for which we develop the GB2group R package. Our results indicate that even the simplest parametric models provide reliable estimates of inequality measures. The non-parametric approach, however, fails to represent income distributions accurately.
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- 2021
12. Between communism and capitalism: long-term inequality in Poland, 1892–2015
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Pawel Bukowski and Filip Novokmet
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inequality ,Ungleichheit ,Distribution (economics) ,Sociology & anthropology ,Economic inequality ,Allgemeine Soziologie, Makrosoziologie, spezielle Theorien und Schulen, Entwicklung und Geschichte der Soziologie ,Economics ,Income inequality ,European Union Statistics on Income and Living Conditions (EU-SILC) ,capitalism ,050207 economics ,Kapitalismus ,D31 ,050205 econometrics ,media_common ,Income shares ,geography.geographical_feature_category ,social inequality ,N34 ,Polen ,05 social sciences ,Kommunismus ,1. No poverty ,Capitalism ,8. Economic growth ,post-socialist country ,ddc:301 ,Einkommensunterschied ,DK Russia. Soviet Union. Former Soviet Republics ,Economics and Econometrics ,Inequality ,media_common.quotation_subject ,HC Economic History and Conditions ,soziale Ungleichheit ,Article ,Transformation ,0502 economics and business ,Development economics ,difference in income ,postsozialistisches Land ,General Sociology, Basic Research, General Concepts and History of Sociology, Sociological Theories ,Communism ,geography ,business.industry ,National accounts ,transformation ,Fell ,communism ,Soziologie, Anthropologie ,J3 ,E01 ,Poland ,business - Abstract
We construct the first consistent series on the long-term distribution of income in Poland by combining tax, household survey and national accounts data. We document a U-shaped evolution of inequalities from the end of the nineteenth century until today: (1) inequality was high before WWII; (2) abruptly fell after the introduction of communism in 1947 and stagnated at low levels during the whole communist period; (3) experienced a sharp rise with the return to capitalism in 1989. We find that official survey-based measures strongly under-estimate the rise in inequality since 1989. Our results highlight the prominent role of capital income in driving the U-shaped evolution of top income shares. The unique inequality history of Poland speaks to the central role of institutions and policies in shaping inequality in the long run. Supplementary Information The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1007/s10887-021-09190-1.
- Published
- 2021
13. Asset bubbles in explaining top income shares
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Matti Tuomala, Saikat Sarkar, Tampere University, and Business Studies
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Organizational Behavior and Human Resource Management ,Price bubbles ,Income shares ,050208 finance ,Sociology and Political Science ,Inequality ,media_common.quotation_subject ,05 social sciences ,Monetary economics ,Capital (economics) ,0502 economics and business ,511 Economics ,Asset (economics) ,050207 economics ,General Economics, Econometrics and Finance ,Stock (geology) ,media_common ,Public finance - Abstract
This paper considers the role of asset price bubbles (crashes) as an important determinant in seeking a further explanation for top income shares. The asset price bubbles caused at least in part by monetary policies, along with other determinants such as top tax rates and innovativeness are the important drivers to explain the surge in top income shares. The empirical results show that correlation between asset bubbles and top inequality is positive and significant. The regression coefficient of stock and housing market bubbles have a positive effect on top income shares, while the stock and housing market crashes fail to reduce the surge in top income shares. In sum, as the asset markets grow, the share of income going to those at the very top increases and the accumulation of income accelerates if the duration of bubbles expands. Concentration of income at the very top is much more important when capital gains are counted as income.
- Published
- 2021
14. WELFARE IMPLICATIONS OF ECONOMIC GROWTH: AN EMPIRICAL ASSESSMENT FOR PAKISTAN
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Jawad Rahim Afridi, Muhammad Farhan Asif, and Zahid Pervaiz
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Income shares ,Index (economics) ,Poverty ,General Arts and Humanities ,media_common.quotation_subject ,05 social sciences ,General Social Sciences ,Standard of living ,Social stratification ,0506 political science ,Fiscal policy ,Order (exchange) ,0502 economics and business ,050602 political science & public administration ,Economics ,Demographic economics ,050207 economics ,Welfare ,media_common - Abstract
Purpose of the study: GDP Growth does not necessarily bring improvements in the lives of people belonging to lower social strata. The objective of this study is to analyse the welfare implications of economic growth in Pakistan. We aim to investigate that to what extent economic growth has been successful to bring improvements in the welfare of the poor segments of the society. Methodology: By using the data of different waves of Household Integrated Economic Survey (HIES), Pakistan Integrated Household Survey (PIHS), Pakistan Social and Living Standards Measurement (PSLM) Survey over the period of 1990-2017, we have done an analysis of income shares received by different income groups. We have also constructed Ahluwalia-Chenery Equal Weighted and Poverty Weighted Welfare Indices (Ahluwalia and Chenery, 1974). In order to analyse the welfare implications of economic growth in the country, these indices have been compared with another index termed as Income Weighted Index (IWI). Main Findings: Empirical results indicate that substantial income gaps exist among different income groups. In the absence of an effective fiscal policy, these gaps do not seem to be narrower.
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- 2021
15. Top Income Shares in Greece From Dictatorship to Crisis: 1967–2017
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Kostas Chrissis and Franciscos Koutentakis
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Economics and Econometrics ,Income shares ,Liberalization ,Inequality ,media_common.quotation_subject ,05 social sciences ,Monetary economics ,Dictatorship ,Recession ,Democracy ,Decile ,0502 economics and business ,Economics ,050207 economics ,050205 econometrics ,media_common ,Debt crisis - Abstract
The paper calculates the top income shares in Greece from 1967 (the seizure of power by the military dictatorship) until 2017 (the aftermath of the debt crisis). This long-run perspective allows for the examination of the relationship between inequality and institutional transformations, namely democracy, finance and crisis. We find in particular that (a) transition to democracy did not affect the income share of the top decile, whereas social democracy had a significant negative impact (b) financial development and liberalization substantially increased all top decile shares (c) debt crisis, consolidation and recession were beneficial for the upper ranks of the top decile.
- Published
- 2021
16. Do policies and institutions matter for pre-tax income inequality? Cross-country evidence
- Author
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Damián Vergara
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Economics and Econometrics ,Labour economics ,Income shares ,Cross country ,Corruption ,media_common.quotation_subject ,05 social sciences ,0506 political science ,Politics ,Economic inequality ,State (polity) ,Accounting ,0502 economics and business ,050602 political science & public administration ,Economics ,Openness to experience ,050207 economics ,Finance ,media_common ,Public finance - Abstract
Do policies and institutions matter for pre-tax income inequality? I build an annual panel of 43 countries for the period 1980–2016 to document cross-country facts. I find robust correlations between pre-tax income shares and economic policy—financial development, trade openness, government expenditure, and income taxation—even after controlling for economic development. I further find that proxies of institutional quality—e.g., state development, corruption, or political exclusion—mediate the relationship between top income shares and economic policy, in particular for trade openness and government expenditure. The role of institutions in allowing or limiting rent-seeking can rationalize the results.
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- 2021
17. A comment on 'Testing Goodwin: growth cycles in ten OECD countries'.
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Grasselli, Matheus R. and Maheshwari, Aditya
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GOODWIN model ,ENDOGENOUS growth (Economics) ,ECONOMIC development ,PARAMETER estimation ,ECONOMICS - Abstract
We revisit the results of Harvie (2000) and show how correcting for a reporting mistake in some of the estimated parameter values leads to significantly different conclusions, including realistic parameter values for the Philips curve and estimated equilibrium employment rates exhibiting on average one-tenth of the relative error of those obtained in Harvie (2000). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
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18. European households' incomes since the crisis.
- Author
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Cirillo, Valeria, Corsi, Marcella, and D'Ippoliti, Carlo
- Abstract
Copyright of Investigación Económica is the property of Universidad Nacional Autonoma de Mexico, Facultad de Economia and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2017
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19. Wealth, Capital and the Theory of Distribution: Some Implications for Piketty’s Analysis.
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Stirati, Antonella
- Subjects
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LITERARY criticism , *ECONOMICS literature , *INCOME inequality , *CAPITAL - Abstract
Thomas Piketty’sCapital in the Twenty-First Century (2014)has been spectacularly successful. One reason for this is that while it often challenges received views and supports a non-apologetic interpretation of capitalism, at the same time it relies on mainstream economics. This theoretical framework, however, is not always conducive to consistency and interpretative accuracy. This paper points out some of the book’s analytical weaknesses and shows that some empirical evidence, a clearer distinction between wealth and capital, and a different theoretical perspective, could lead to questioning some of the book’s claims. In particular, it argues that the increase in the wealth-to-output ratio (but not the capital-to-output ratio) cannot explain the observed changes in income shares. It also contends that non-mainstream perspectives on income distribution and growth suggest that changes in income distribution are due more to policy and power relations than to the factors Piketty identifies. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
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20. Financial development and top income shares in<scp>OECD</scp>countries
- Author
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Russell Smyth, Anjan K. Saha, and Vinod Mishra
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Estimation ,Economics and Econometrics ,Income shares ,business.industry ,05 social sciences ,Distribution (economics) ,Oecd countries ,Financial development ,0502 economics and business ,Econometrics ,Economics ,050207 economics ,business ,050205 econometrics ,Generalized method of moments - Abstract
We examine the causal impact of financial development (FD) on top income shares for a panel of 14 OECD countries—five Anglo‐Saxon countries, eight continental European countries, and Japan—over a 110‐year period. In our main General Method of Moments estimates, we find that a 1‐percentage‐point change in FD increases the top 1% income share by 0.2%. In distribution terms, a 1‐SD incr=ease in FD increases the top 1% income share by around 0.4 of an SD. The effects are robust to various measures of top income shares and FD and alternative estimation techniques, including nonparametric estimation. FD is typically viewed in positive terms in that it makes it easier to access credit and facilitates economic growth. Our results are important because they contribute to understanding of the potential negative effects of FD.
- Published
- 2020
21. Understating the Impact of Economic Factors on Stock Yield: Jordanian Stock Market Case
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Ade Al-Nimri and Yaseen Altarawneh
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education.field_of_study ,Income shares ,lcsh:HB71-74 ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Population ,Dividend yield ,lcsh:Economics as a science ,Sample (statistics) ,Monetary economics ,lcsh:Business ,Gross domestic product ,Interest rate ,Balance of payments ,Stock market ,Business ,education ,lcsh:HF5001-6182 ,General Economics, Econometrics and Finance ,media_common - Abstract
The study aimed to identify the most salient and critical factors influencing the Stock yield and causing this sharp fluctuation, and clarifying which factors are more influential than others on the Stock yield in the Amman Stock Market – Jordan. The study population consisted of all listed companies in the Amman Stock Market. The sample of the study is random stratified and includes 30% of the original population. The study sample numbered 60 companies of the companies listed on the Amman Stock Market. The main findings are the positive relationship between inflation rates, interest rate, number of employees and capital shares with income shares. The results also showed no relationship between the deficit and surplus of balance of payments and stock yield, as well as no relationship between the level of gross domestic product (GDP) and the stock yield in Amman Stock Market in Jordan. Keywords: Stock yield, inflation rate, interest rate, number of employees, balance of payment, gross domestic product.JEL Classifications: E44; G10DOI: https://doi.org/10.32479/ijefi.10415
- Published
- 2020
22. Genetic distance, economic growth and top income shares: Evidence from OECD countries
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Anjan K. Saha and Vinod Mishra
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Economics and Econometrics ,Income shares ,Labour economics ,050208 finance ,Inequality ,media_common.quotation_subject ,05 social sciences ,Oecd countries ,Economic inequality ,Capital (economics) ,0502 economics and business ,Premise ,Economics ,Endogeneity ,050207 economics ,media_common - Abstract
The relationship between economic growth and income inequality remains a puzzle in the literature. The main problem has been finding a way to account for the endogeneity of growth. Using century-long data of 14 OECD countries, this study disentangles the growth–inequality relationship. In doing so, our main contribution is employing genetic and geographical distances as instruments for economic growth. The instruments are constructed on the premise that the growth of one country spills over to the others if they are connected through trade and other forms of exchange; however, the genetic and geographical distances between countries represent barriers to such spillovers. Using alternative specifications and measures, we find that growth reduces the inequality measured by top income shares. As capital share increases in the growth process and capital substitutes labour, inequality-reducing strength of growth declines. Another important finding is that the effect of growth on top income shares is more significant among the highest income groups.
- Published
- 2020
23. The labor share and income inequality: some empirical evidence for the period 1990-2015
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Iñaki Erauskin
- Subjects
Income shares ,Inequality ,Gini coefficient ,media_common.quotation_subject ,05 social sciences ,Developing country ,Human capital ,Economic inequality ,0502 economics and business ,Economics ,Demographic economics ,Wage share ,050207 economics ,General Economics, Econometrics and Finance ,050205 econometrics ,media_common ,Panel data - Abstract
Purpose The purpose of this paper is to analyze empirically the relationship between the labor share and income inequality, as measured by the Gini coefficient and by the income shares for different quintiles, during the period 1990–2015 for 62 developed and developing countries. Design/methodology/approach This study uses panel data techniques to analyze empirically the relationship between the labor share and income inequality. Findings This paper finds that a lower labor share is associated with a higher Gini coefficient. A lower labor share is found to be strongly associated with a smaller income share for the lowest two quintiles and larger income share for the highest quintile and weakly associated with a smaller income share for the third and fourth quintiles. Moreover, this paper finds that the lower the quintile, the stronger the impact of the labor share on the income share of the quintile. Social implications Policymakers should take into account the evolution of the labor share. Public policies that improve labor market outcomes, such as those aimed to promote participation in the labor market and strengthen the human capital of low-income groups, seem necessary to prevent the rise in economic inequalities. Moreover, as the digital transformation of society progresses, policies to promote skill deepening may have an important role in reversing excessive inequalities. Originality/value How changes in the labor share are associated with changes in the Gini coefficient, and how this is driven by income shares for different quintiles, for a broad range of countries during the most recent period, has not been comprehensively studied using panel data techniques.
- Published
- 2020
24. Efficient minimum distance estimation of Pareto exponent from top income shares
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Alexis Akira Toda and Yulong Wang
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FOS: Computer and information sciences ,Economics and Econometrics ,Income shares ,General Economics (econ.GN) ,05 social sciences ,Order statistic ,Pareto principle ,Estimator ,Mathematics - Statistics Theory ,Statistics Theory (math.ST) ,Redistribution (cultural anthropology) ,Asymptotic theory (statistics) ,Statistics - Applications ,FOS: Economics and business ,Minimum distance estimation ,0502 economics and business ,FOS: Mathematics ,Exponent ,Econometrics ,Applications (stat.AP) ,050207 economics ,Social Sciences (miscellaneous) ,Economics - General Economics ,050205 econometrics ,Mathematics - Abstract
We propose an efficient estimation method for the income Pareto exponent when only certain top income shares are observable. Our estimator is based on the asymptotic theory of weighted sums of order statistics and the efficient minimum distance estimator. Simulations show that our estimator has excellent finite‐sample properties. We apply our estimation method to US top income share data and find that the Pareto exponent has been ranging between 1.4 and 1.8 since 1985, suggesting that the rise in inequality during the last three decades is mainly driven by redistribution between the rich and poor, not among the rich.
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- 2020
25. Firm beliefs and long-run demand effects in a labor-constrained model of growth and distribution
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Daniele Tavani and Luke Petach
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Factor shares ,Income shares ,Economics and Econometrics ,05 social sciences ,Monetary economics ,General Business, Management and Accounting ,Technical change ,Fiscal policy ,0502 economics and business ,Economics ,Capacity utilization ,Wage share ,Evolutionary economics ,050207 economics ,Inefficiency ,Utilization rate ,050203 business & management - Abstract
One of the most debated questions in alternative macroeconomics regards whether demand policies have permanent or merely transitory effects. While demand matters in the long run in (neo-) Kaleckian economics, both economists operating within other Keynesian traditions (e.g. Skott 1989) as well as Classical economists Dumenil and Levy (Manchester School 67(6):684–716, 1999) argue that in the long-run output growth is constrained by an exogenous natural growth rate. This paper attempts to bridge the gap by analyzing the role of firm beliefs about the state of the economy in a labor-constrained growth and distribution model based on Kaldor (Review of Economic Studies 23(2):83–100, 1956) and Goodwin (Journal of Evolutionary Economics 1(1):29–47, 1991) that is also compatible with the evolutionary perspective on coordination (or the lack thereof) within markets by Metcalfe et al. (Cambridge Journal of Economics 30:7–32, 2006). The main innovation is the inclusion of beliefs about economic activity in an explicitly dynamic choice of capacity utilization at the firm level. We show that: (i) the relevance of such beliefs generates an inefficiently low utilization rate and labor share in equilibrium, but (ii) the efficient utilization rate can be implemented through fiscal policy. Under exogenous technical change, (iii) the inefficiency does not affect the equilibrium employment rate and growth rate, but expansionary fiscal policy has positive level effects on both GDP and the labor share. However, (iv) with endogenous technical change a la Verdoorn (1949), fiscal policy has also temporary growth effects. Finally, (v) the fact that the choice of utilization responds to income shares has a stabilizing effect on growth cycles, even under exogenous technical change, that is analogous to factor substitution.
- Published
- 2020
26. Tax progressivity and top incomes evidence from tax reforms
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Daniel Waldenström and Enrico Rubolino
- Subjects
Estimation ,Organizational Behavior and Human Resource Management ,Income shares ,Labour economics ,Sociology and Political Science ,Capital income ,05 social sciences ,050109 social psychology ,Tax avoidance ,Lower half ,Decile ,Economic inequality ,0502 economics and business ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,050207 economics ,General Economics, Econometrics and Finance ,Public finance - Abstract
We study the link between tax progressivity and top income shares. Using variation from Western tax reforms in the 1980s and 1990s and synthetic control method estimation, we find that reductions in tax progressivity had large and lasting positive impacts on top income shares. The effects are largest within the top percentile and almost zero in the lower half of the top decile, and all results are robust to different model specifications, placebo tests in time and space, and controlling for other contemporaneous reforms. Searching for mechanisms, we find that the effects seem to operate mainly through reductions in top marginal tax rates and that the share of capital income in top incomes increased after the reforms, indicating that tax avoidance behavior could explain some of the observed effects.
- Published
- 2020
27. Markov-Switching Model of Family Income Quintile Shares
- Author
-
Nikolaos Papanikolaou
- Subjects
Inflation ,Income shares ,Economic inequality ,Markov chain ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Unemployment ,Progressive tax ,Econometrics ,Economics ,Family income ,General Economics, Econometrics and Finance ,media_common ,Public finance - Abstract
This paper examines the impact of unemployment and inflation on family income shares. Unemployment and inflation are decomposed into their structural (long-term), cyclical (short-term), anticipated and unanticipated components, respectively. I propose a new framework to analyze family income quintile shares by using a two-state Markov-switching model, also known as Hamilton’s regime-switching model. The benefit of using a Markov-switching model is that it permits capturing complex dynamic behavior of non-linear time series macroeconomic variables. The switching mechanism follows a first-order Markov chain of unobservable state variables and subsequent estimated conditional transition probabilities. This paper applies a two-state regime-switching process to capture the asymmetrical effects of unemployment and inflation on family income shares. The two states of family income quintile shares are state 1 (lower income) and state 2 (upper income). This approach differs from previous studies because it examines income inequality within each quintile rather than between quintiles. It is well documented in the literature that there is income inequality between lower and higher income quintiles. Therefore, the analysis of income inequality within the quintile allows for greater insight into changes in family income share corresponding to changes in the state variables. The general findings are that unemployment has adverse effects on lower income shares while inflation acts like a progressive tax on higher income shares.
- Published
- 2020
28. Who gains from economic freedom? A panel analysis on decile income shares
- Author
-
Donatella Saccone
- Subjects
Economic freedom ,Decile ,Economics and Econometrics ,Income shares ,Panel analysis ,Income distribution ,Economics ,Developing country ,Demographic economics - Abstract
By analysing a panel of 76 developed and developing countries for period 1980–2014, this paper provides new evidence about the relation between economic freedom and income distribution, measured th...
- Published
- 2020
29. Conflicting‐claims and labour market concerns in a supermultiplier SFC model
- Author
-
Lídia Brochier
- Subjects
Inflation ,Economics and Econometrics ,Labour economics ,Income shares ,050208 finance ,media_common.quotation_subject ,05 social sciences ,Wage ,Investment (macroeconomics) ,Bargaining power ,0502 economics and business ,Economics ,050207 economics ,Marginal propensity to consume ,Productivity ,media_common - Abstract
We propose to introduce inflation via conflicting‐claims, an endogenous labour productivity regime a la Kaldor‐Verdoorn and an explicit account for the labour market into an SFC model that combines an endogenous autonomous expenditure component with the induced investment behaviour of firms. The aim of the paper is to analyse the dynamics of real wage and productivity growth and the impacts on the long run growth trend, income shares and the employment rate of: (a) changes in the propensity to consume; (b) changes in the bargaining power of workers; and (c) changes in the labour productivity under different institutional settings.
- Published
- 2020
30. Nonlinear impact of financial deepening on income inequality
- Author
-
Virmantas Kvedaras and Peter Benczur
- Subjects
Statistics and Probability ,Economics and Econometrics ,Income shares ,Index (economics) ,Inequality ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Monetary economics ,Financial deepening ,Interest rate ,Mathematics (miscellaneous) ,Economic inequality ,Economics ,Open economy ,Real interest rate ,Social Sciences (miscellaneous) ,media_common - Abstract
This paper looks at the influence of financial deepening (private bank credit) on income inequality in developed economies. Building on a model of financially open economies (Kunieda et al. (Macroecon Dyn 18:1091–1128, 2014)), defining its endogenous economic growth rate, and extending its implications also for top income shares, it is shown that the impact of bank credit on inequality depends on the gap between the real interest rate and the GDP growth rate (‘$$r-g$$ r - g ’). This finding is robustly confirmed by the empirical analysis on a few samples of OECD and EU countries, both for the Gini index and for top income shares. Both the econometric evidence and simple evidence show that the presence of this type of non-linearity (an interaction between financial deepening and $$r-g$$ r - g ) is likely to be one of the reasons for the mixed results that may be found in the empirical literature on the relationship between the financial deepening and income inequality.
- Published
- 2020
31. The changing climate-migration relationship in China, 1989–2011
- Author
-
Clark Gray, Valerie Mueller, and Douglas Hopping
- Subjects
Atmospheric Science ,Global and Planetary Change ,Income shares ,010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences ,business.industry ,Internal migration ,0208 environmental biotechnology ,Vulnerability ,Climate change ,02 engineering and technology ,Livelihood ,01 natural sciences ,Article ,020801 environmental engineering ,Geography ,Agriculture ,Economic geography ,Adaptation ,China ,business ,0105 earth and related environmental sciences - Abstract
A persistent concern about the social consequences of climate change is that large, vulnerable populations will be involuntarily displaced. Existing evidence suggests that changes in precipitation and temperature can increase migration in particular contexts, but the potential for this relationship to evolve over time alongside processes of adaptation and development has not been widely explored. To address this issue, we link longitudinal data from 20 thousand Chinese adults from 1989-2011 to external data on climate anomalies, and use this linked dataset to explore how climatic effects on internal migration have changed over time while controlling for potential spatial and temporal confounders. We find that temperature anomalies initially displaced permanent migrants at the beginning of our study period, but that this effect had reversed by the end of the study period. A parallel analysis of income shares suggests that the explanation might lie in climate vulnerability shifting from agricultural to non-agricultural livelihood activities. Taken together with evidence from previous case studies, our results open the door to a potential future in which development and in-situ adaptation allow climate-induced migration to decline over time, even as climate change unfolds.
- Published
- 2020
32. Inequality in Nineteenth-Century Manhattan: Evidence from the Housing Market
- Author
-
Rowena Gray
- Subjects
Consumption (economics) ,History ,Income shares ,education.field_of_study ,Inequality ,060106 history of social sciences ,business.industry ,media_common.quotation_subject ,05 social sciences ,Economic rent ,Population ,06 humanities and the arts ,Newspaper ,Renting ,0502 economics and business ,Economics ,0601 history and archaeology ,Demographic economics ,050207 economics ,education ,business ,Social Sciences (miscellaneous) ,media_common - Abstract
Historical inequality is difficult to measure, especially at the subcountry level and beyond the top income shares. This article presents new evidence on the level of inequality in Manhattan from 1880 to 1910 using housing rents. Rental prices and characteristics, including geocodable locations, were collected from newspapers and provide extensive geographic coverage of the island, relevant for the overwhelming majority of its population where renting predominated. This provides a measure of consumption inequality at the household level, which helps to develop the picture of urban inequality for this period, when income and wealth measures are scarce. For large American cities, but particularly for New York, housing made up a large share of consumption expenditure and its consumption cannot be substituted, so this is a reliable and feasible way to identify the true trends in urban inequality across space and time.
- Published
- 2020
33. Employment protection legislation and labour income shares in Europe
- Author
-
Jesus Ferreiro, Philips Arestis, and Carmen Gómez
- Subjects
Labour economics ,Income shares ,Employment protection legislation ,Compensation of employees ,media_common.quotation_subject ,income distribution ,05 social sciences ,lcsh:Economic theory. Demography ,0506 political science ,lcsh:HB1-3840 ,0502 economics and business ,Unemployment ,Agency (sociology) ,labour markets ,050602 political science & public administration ,Business ,employment protection legislation ,050207 economics ,Real wages ,General Economics, Econometrics and Finance ,labour incomeshare ,media_common - Abstract
The paper analyses the determinant elements of the evolution of labour income share, measured by the size of compensation of employees as a percentage of GDP in twenty European economies. In doing so, special attention is paid to the impact of employment protection legislation. Our study’s results show that the evolution of labour income share is explained by the economic growth, the growth of employment and unemployment rates, and the growth of real wages. Regarding employment protection, only employment protection for temporary workers matters. Our results shows that stricter provisions on the use of fixed-term and temporary agency contracts have a positive impact on the growth of the labour shares.Key words: Employment protection legislation, Labour markets, Labour income share, Income distribution.JEL: C33, E24, E25, F66.
- Published
- 2020
34. Institutional reforms and income distribution: Evidence from post-transition EU countries
- Author
-
Sladjana Bodor, Novica Supic, and Kosta Josifidis
- Subjects
media_common.quotation_subject ,Wage ,Eu countries ,Economic inequality ,institutional changes ,Income distribution ,Institutional changes ,Economics ,media_common.cataloged_instance ,European Union ,Income inequality ,European union ,10. No inequality ,health care economics and organizations ,european union ,media_common ,Income shares ,Transition (fiction) ,lcsh:Economic theory. Demography ,1. No poverty ,lcsh:HB1-3840 ,Post-transition countries ,8. Economic growth ,posttransition countries ,Demographic economics ,General Economics, Econometrics and Finance ,income inequality ,Panel data - Abstract
This paper provides an explanation of income dynamics in the posttransition EU countries from the perspective of institutional changes. As a result of seemingly-unrelated regressions analysis on panel data from 1990-2014, we find robust evidence of the relationship between income shares and institutional reforms. The impact of reforms on the top and below-average income shares is negative, whereas this effect on above above-average income share is positive. Decline of income share for the richest class during the post-transitional period can be attributed to the loss of privileges associated with the existence of an institutional vacuum in the first years of transition. Although transition increased wages for workers at the end of income distribution, the job losses had a stronger effect than wage increase, so the overall effect on income share of this group is negative. The winners of reforms appear as the workers with above-average income, whose skills are complementary to the changes instituted by transition to market economy and integration in the EU. [Project of the Serbian Ministry of Education, Science and Technological Development, Grant no. 47010]
- Published
- 2020
35. The 'Forgotten' middle class: An analysis of the effects of globalisation
- Author
-
Jakob de Haan, Jan-Egbert Sturm, Regina Pleninger, and Research programme GEM
- Subjects
Economics and Econometrics ,Income shares ,Index (economics) ,Middle class ,De facto ,income shares ,Inequality ,media_common.quotation_subject ,globalisation ,income inequality ,middle class ,Economic globalization ,Globalization ,Economic inequality ,Accounting ,Political Science and International Relations ,Development economics ,Economics ,Finance ,media_common - Abstract
This paper studies the effects of globalisation on the income share of the middle class. Our findings suggest that globalisation, proxied by the KOF Economic Globalization Index, reduces the income share of the middle class. The income share of the poorest 20% also drops due to globalisation, while that of the richest 20% increases. We find that only de facto and not de jure measures of globalisation have statistically significant effects on income shares and inequality. Our results are robust for alternative definitions of the middle-class income share and hold for trade and financial globalisation. When we distinguish between groups of countries, we find that our main result is driven by low- and middle-income countries; for high-income countries, we do not find evidence that globalisation has an effect on the income share of the middle class., The World Economy, 45 (1), ISSN:0378-5920, ISSN:1467-9701
- Published
- 2022
36. Labour Share Developments in OECD Countries Over the Past Two Decades
- Author
-
Mathilde Pak, Pierre-Alain Pionnier, and Cyrille Schwellnus
- Subjects
Statistics and Probability ,Economics and Econometrics ,Income shares ,Labour economics ,Sociology and Political Science ,Technological change ,Oecd countries ,Investment (macroeconomics) ,Frontier ,Economics ,Dynamism ,Market share ,JEL Classification D33 - F66 - J24 - J38 - J58 - L11 - O33 ,public policies ,skills ,global value chains ,superstar firms ,labour share ,Global value chain - Abstract
Over the past two decades, real wage growth in many OECD countries has decoupled from labour productivity growth, as labour income shares have declined. This paper analyses the drivers of labour share developments using a combination of industry-and firm-level data. Technological change in the investment goods-producing sector and greater global value chain participation have compressed labour shares, but the effect of technological change has been significantly less pronounced for high-skilled workers. Countries with falling labour shares have witnessed both a decline at the technological frontier and a reallocation of market shares toward “superstar” firms with low labour shares. The decline at the technological frontier mainly reflects the entry of firms with low labour shares into the frontier rather than a decline of labour shares in incumbent frontier firms, suggesting that thus far this process is mainly explained by technological dynamism rather than anti-competitive forces., Pak Mathilde, Pionnier Pierre-Alain, Schwellnus Cyrille. Labour Share Developments in OECD Countries Over the Past Two Decades. In: Economie et Statistique / Economics and Statistics, n°510-512, Special Issue 50th Anniversary. pp. 17-34.
- Published
- 2019
37. A simple method for estimating the Lorenz curve
- Author
-
Kanyarat Holasut and Thitithep Sitthiyot
- Subjects
FOS: Computer and information sciences ,Income shares ,General Economics (econ.GN) ,Index (economics) ,General Arts and Humanities ,Social Sciences ,General Social Sciences ,Expression (computer science) ,General Business, Management and Accounting ,Methodology (stat.ME) ,FOS: Economics and business ,Economic inequality ,Simple (abstract algebra) ,Income distribution ,AZ20-999 ,Statistics ,History of scholarship and learning. The humanities ,Lorenz curve ,General Economics, Econometrics and Finance ,General Psychology ,Statistics - Methodology ,Parametric statistics ,Mathematics ,Economics - General Economics - Abstract
Given many popular functional forms for the Lorenz curve do not have a closed-form expression for the Gini index and no study has utilized the observed Gini index to estimate parameter(s) associated with the corresponding parametric functional form, a simple method for estimating the Lorenz curve is introduced. It utilizes 3 indicators, namely, the Gini index and the income shares of the bottom and the top in order to calculate the values of parameters associated with the specified functional form which has a closed-form expression for the Gini index. No error minimization technique is required in order to estimate the Lorenz curve. The data on the Gini index and the income shares of 4 countries that have different level of income inequality, economic, sociological, and regional backgrounds from the United Nations University-World Income Inequality Database are used to illustrate how the simple method works. The overall results indicate that the estimated Lorenz curves fit the actual observations practically well. This simple method could be useful in the situation where the availability of data on income distribution is low. However, if more data on income distribution are available, this study shows that the specified functional form could be used to directly estimate the Lorenz curve. Moreover, the estimated values of the Gini index calculated based on the specified functional form are virtually identical to their actual observations., 9 pages, 10 tables, 1 figure
- Published
- 2021
38. Couples' early career trajectories and later life housing consequences in Germany: Investigating cumulative disadvantages
- Author
-
Sophia Maria Fauser and Sonja Scheuring
- Subjects
Income shares ,Inequality ,Cumulative disadvantages ,media_common.quotation_subject ,05 social sciences ,0211 other engineering and technologies ,Multichannel sequence analysis ,021107 urban & regional planning ,Regression analysis ,02 engineering and technology ,Couples' career insecurity ,Affect (psychology) ,0506 political science ,Homeownership ,8. Economic growth ,Early adulthood ,Unemployment ,050602 political science & public administration ,Life course approach ,Demographic economics ,Early career ,Life-span and Life-course Studies ,Psychology ,Rent affordability ,media_common - Abstract
Using data on couples from the German Socio-Economic Panel (1995–2018), this study investigates how couples’ early career trajectories affect housing outcomes in early adulthood and how this effect is mediated by couples’ joint cumulative income. We apply a life course perspective by identifying dynamic treatments consisting of couples’ consecutive employment statuses and examining their longer-term effects on homeownership and income shares spent on rent. Using multichannel sequence and regression analysis, we find that couples in which both partners have insecure employment trajectories, characterized by frequent spells of fixed-term employment and unemployment, are 25 percentage points less likely to own a home in early adulthood compared to couples with more secure career trajectories. Surprisingly, the couples’ cumulative income does not remarkably mediate this effect, explaining less than one-fifth of the total effect. For couples who do not own their home but rent, we find that couples with insecure careers spend between 2 and 5 percentage points more of their joint income on rent compared to couples where both partners have secure career trajectories. Cumulative income disadvantages mediate the effects on shares of income spent on rent and reduce the effect sizes by 30–40%. Our findings indicate that inequalities caused by early career patterns can accumulate not only over time but also within couples and transfer to other areas of life, exacerbating housing and wealth inequalities in the longer run.
- Published
- 2021
39. Income inequality under colonial rule. Evidence from French Algeria, Cameroon, Tunisia, and Vietnam and comparisons with British colonies 1920–1960
- Author
-
Facundo Alvaredo, Thomas Piketty, Denis Cogneau, Paris School of Economics (PSE), École des Ponts ParisTech (ENPC)-École normale supérieure - Paris (ENS Paris), Université Paris sciences et lettres (PSL)-Université Paris sciences et lettres (PSL)-Université Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne (UP1)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-École des hautes études en sciences sociales (EHESS)-Institut National de Recherche pour l’Agriculture, l’Alimentation et l’Environnement (INRAE), Paris Jourdan Sciences Economiques (PJSE), Université Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne (UP1)-École normale supérieure - Paris (ENS Paris), Université Paris sciences et lettres (PSL)-Université Paris sciences et lettres (PSL)-École des hautes études en sciences sociales (EHESS)-École des Ponts ParisTech (ENPC)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-Institut National de Recherche pour l’Agriculture, l’Alimentation et l’Environnement (INRAE), ANR-17-EURE-0001,PGSE,Ecole d'Economie de Paris(2017), ANR-11-BSH1-0006,AFRISTORY,Histoire coloniale et Développement en Afrique(2011), and World Inequality Lab (WIL)
- Subjects
Economics and Econometrics ,JEL: N - Economic History/N.N3 - Labor and Consumers, Demography, Education, Health, Welfare, Income, Wealth, Religion, and Philanthropy/N.N3.N37 - Africa • Oceania ,Asia ,Inequality ,Expatriate ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Development ,Colonialism ,Economic inequality ,State (polity) ,Income tax ,0502 economics and business ,050207 economics ,10. No inequality ,050205 econometrics ,media_common ,Income shares ,05 social sciences ,1. No poverty ,JEL: O - Economic Development, Innovation, Technological Change, and Growth/O.O1 - Economic Development/O.O1.O15 - Human Resources • Human Development • Income Distribution • Migration ,[SHS.ECO]Humanities and Social Sciences/Economics and Finance ,Independence ,Top incomes ,Geography ,8. Economic growth ,Africa ,JEL: O - Economic Development, Innovation, Technological Change, and Growth/O.O5 - Economywide Country Studies/O.O5.O55 - Africa ,Demographic economics ,JEL: N - Economic History/N.N3 - Labor and Consumers, Demography, Education, Health, Welfare, Income, Wealth, Religion, and Philanthropy ,JEL: O - Economic Development, Innovation, Technological Change, and Growth/O.O5 - Economywide Country Studies/O.O5.O53 - Asia including Middle East ,JEL: N - Economic History/N.N3 - Labor and Consumers, Demography, Education, Health, Welfare, Income, Wealth, Religion, and Philanthropy/N.N3.N35 - Asia including Middle East - Abstract
In this article we assess income inequality across French and British colonial empires between 1920 and 1960. For the first time, income tax tabulations are exploited to assess the case studies of French Algeria, Tunisia, Cameroon, and Vietnam, which we compare to British colonies and dominions. As measured by top income shares, inequality was high in colonies. It fell after WWII, but stabilized at much higher levels than in mainland France or the United Kingdom in the 1950s. European settlers or expatriates comprised the bulk of top income earners, and only a minority of autochthons could compete in terms of income, particularly in Africa. Top income shares were no higher in settlement colonies, not only because those territories were wealthier but also because the average European settler was less rich than the average European expatriate. Inequality between Europeans in colonies was similar to (or even below) that of the metropoles. In settlement colonies, the post-WWII fall in income inequality can be explained by a fall in inequality between Europeans, mirroring that of the metropoles, and does not imply that the European/autochthon income gap was reduced.
- Published
- 2021
40. Top Indian wealth shares and inheritances 1966–1985
- Author
-
Rishabh Kumar
- Subjects
Economics and Econometrics ,History ,Income shares ,060106 history of social sciences ,media_common.quotation_subject ,05 social sciences ,06 humanities and the arts ,0502 economics and business ,Economics ,0601 history and archaeology ,Demographic economics ,050207 economics ,Inheritance ,Estate tax ,History general ,Wealth concentration ,media_common - Abstract
Between 1953 and 1985 India implemented various progressive taxes on personal wealth. I use estate tax returns to compute top wealth shares (top 1%, top 0.1% and top 0.01%) over 1966-1985; a period marked explicitly by a dirigiste policy environment. These new series suggest that wealth concentration in India reduced substantially during the 1970s. Although the decline affected the entire top 1%, the losses faced by the top 0.01% were especially large. Combined with identical trends in top income shares, it appears that the 1950-80 expropriations of India’s rich had similarities to institutional transitions and shocks faced by European elites in the early to mid twentieth century.
- Published
- 2019
41. Income shares, secular stagnation and the long‐run distribution of wealth
- Author
-
Luke Petach and Daniele Tavani
- Subjects
Factor shares ,Economics and Econometrics ,Labour economics ,Income shares ,Stylized fact ,050208 finance ,Elasticity of substitution ,05 social sciences ,Economic stagnation ,Monopsony ,0502 economics and business ,Economics ,Wage share ,050207 economics ,Productivity - Abstract
Four alarming stylized facts have recently emerged in the United States: (a) a decline in the labor share of income; (b) a decline in labor productivity; (c) an increase in the top 1% wealth share and (d) an increase in the capital‐income ratio. In Capital in the XXI Century, Thomas Piketty's argument is that the r > g inequality determines an increase in the capital‐income ratio; if the elasticity of substitution in production is above one, the profit share rises. We provide a contrasting explanation that draws from the Post Keynesian approach to differential saving propensities between classes and the Classical‐Marxian theory of induced technical change. In a simple model of “capitalists” and “workers,” we show that institutional changes that lower the labor share—declining unionization, increasing monopsony power in the labor market, the global ‘race to the bottom' in unit labor costs or the exhaustion of path‐breaking scientific discoveries—can reduce labor productivity growth because of the lessened incentives to innovate to save on labor costs. A falling labor share reduces workers' total savings, and wealth concentrates in the capitalists' hands. A higher profit share and wealth share both put pressure on accumulation: but the long‐run growth rate, which is anchored to labor productivity growth, has fallen. To restore balanced growth, the capital‐income ratio must rise, independent of the elasticity of substitution. These tendencies are not inevitable: taxation can be used to implement any wealth distribution targeted by policymakers, while worker‐crushing institutional arrangements can also in principle be reversed through policy. Neither change appears likely given the current institutional and global policy climate.
- Published
- 2019
42. A Community Divided: Top Incomes in CARICOM Member States
- Author
-
Collin Constantine
- Subjects
Income shares ,Inequality ,Structural adjustment ,050204 development studies ,media_common.quotation_subject ,05 social sciences ,Geography, Planning and Development ,Differential (mechanical device) ,Development ,Colonialism ,Geography ,Development studies ,0502 economics and business ,Development economics ,Settlement (trust) ,050207 economics ,Natural disaster ,media_common - Abstract
Using a newly created dataset, this article documents the trends in top income shares for CARICOM member states during the 1960–2015 period. Belize, Suriname, Guyana, Jamaica and Haiti are high-inequality countries as compared to Trinidad & Tobago, The Bahamas, Barbados and St. Lucia. Barbados is the only low-inequality country that is converging to its high-inequality peers, while Belize experiences the greatest decline in top income share. The article argues that differential European settlement and land size are colonial origins explaining why member states are divided into high- and low-inequality groups. However, the article demonstrates the importance of policy for distributional outcomes—like the role of Offshore Financial Centres in the case of Barbados. The paper also shows how structural adjustment policies and natural disasters can account for the volatility observed in top incomes. Finally, the article proposes that the lack of inequality-reducing structural change is an important explanation for the enormous holding power of top incomes across the community.
- Published
- 2019
43. Global interpersonal income inequality decline: The role of China and India
- Author
-
Zsolt Darvas
- Subjects
Economics and Econometrics ,education.field_of_study ,Income shares ,Sociology and Political Science ,Gini coefficient ,Inequality ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Geography, Planning and Development ,Population ,Convergence (economics) ,Development ,Per capita income ,Economic inequality ,Economics ,Demographic economics ,Lorenz curve ,education ,media_common - Abstract
While various methodologies have been used in the literature to estimate global interpersonal income inequality, the accuracy of these methods has not so far been tested. We compare the accuracy of four methods and find that the Lorenz curve regression method is the most accurate and robust, while the accuracy of the identical quantile income and the Kernel density methods depends on the level of detail about income shares. The simple two-parameter distribution method is also very accurate when either the Log-normal or the Weibull distribution is used. Using the two-parameter distribution method, we show that global income inequality among the citizens of 145 countries declined significantly between 1988 and 2015, largely because of the convergence of income per capita, which was offset to a small degree by the increase in within-country inequalities and the increased population share of poorer and more unequal countries. Regional income inequality declined in most parts of the world, with the notable exception of developing Asia where it has increased. Despite the large increases in within-China and within-India inequality, income convergence of the two countries drove down global income inequality. Without China and India, global interpersonal income inequality in 143 countries was higher in 2015 than in 1988, indicating that more than half of the world has not really become more equal.
- Published
- 2019
44. Top 1 Percent Income Shares: Comparing Estimates Using Tax Data
- Author
-
Gerald Auten and David Splinter
- Subjects
Social insurance ,Income shares ,Income distribution ,Economics ,Demographic economics ,General Medicine ,Affect (psychology) - Abstract
Many studies have used tax data to measure the U.S. income distribution, but their results vary widely. For example, in 2014 the top 1 percent share of income is 21.5 percent in Piketty and Saez (2003 and updates), 16.7 percent in the Congressional Budget Office (2018), and 13.1 percent in our analysis. What accounts for such large differences? We provide a step-by-step analysis of how methodological differences affect the results and address issues raised in Piketty, Saez, and Zucman (2018, 2019). Important differences include accounting for declining marriage rates, including social insurance and employer benefits, accounting for tax reforms, and including income missing from tax returns.
- Published
- 2019
45. Inequality: traditional drivers and the role of union power
- Author
-
Florence Jaumotte and Carolina Osorio Buitron
- Subjects
Economics and Econometrics ,Income shares ,Inequality ,Technological change ,media_common.quotation_subject ,05 social sciences ,Instrumental variable ,Decile ,Globalization ,Net income ,0502 economics and business ,Economics ,Demographic economics ,050207 economics ,Developed country ,050205 econometrics ,media_common - Abstract
We examine the factors explaining the increase in gross and net income inequality in advanced economies since the 1980s. Our results support the view that globalization, technological progress, financial deregulation and lower top marginal tax rates are associated with higher inequality, and we find that the relation between the decline in union density and the rise in top decile income shares—a phenomenon which labour economists have long been discussing—is widespread across advanced economies. The influence of union density on top income shares appears to be causal, as evidenced by our instrumental variable estimates and the inclusion of potentially omitted variables.
- Published
- 2019
46. Comparing income-shares and percentage-of-income child support guidelines
- Author
-
Maria Cancian and Molly Costanzo
- Subjects
Income shares ,Actuarial science ,Equity (economics) ,Sociology and Political Science ,05 social sciences ,050301 education ,Guideline ,Education ,Child support ,Ask price ,Developmental and Educational Psychology ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Business ,Divorcing parents ,0503 education ,050104 developmental & child psychology - Abstract
Child support guidelines are one of the most explicit, and consequential, public articulations of parents' obligations to their biological children. States must weigh a variety of policy tradeoffs, including issues of equity, transparency, and simplicity. Many states are shifting to “income-shares” guidelines models from “percentage-of-income” models, citing a perceived increase in equity and flexibility. Given additional complexities in implementing the income-shares model, we ask how often, and for whom, alternative guidelines yield substantially different child support orders. We use state administrative data on matched pairs of divorcing parents to simulate expected order amounts for each type of guideline. We find that, despite substantial differences in the information required to implement alternative models, for most families, adopting a different model would result in only modest changes in the amount of child support due. However, in some instances a different model would result in large changes, particularly for relatively low-income fathers.
- Published
- 2019
47. On the long-run dynamics of income and wealth inequality
- Author
-
Atanu Ghoshray, Javier Ordóñez, and Issam Malki
- Subjects
Statistics and Probability ,Estimation ,trends ,Economics and Econometrics ,Income shares ,inequality ,Inequality ,media_common.quotation_subject ,persistence ,Decile ,Mathematics (miscellaneous) ,Asian country ,Economics ,top income shares ,Demographic economics ,Social Sciences (miscellaneous) ,media_common - Abstract
We analyse top income and wealth shares data, by conducting a robust estimation of trends, tests for structural breaks, and tests for determining persistence. We include Anglo-Saxon countries, continental Europe and Asian countries, grouped under different percentiles and deciles, spanning a period that is at least close to a century. We find that the top income shares for almost all countries are characterised by broken trends, or level shifts. The preponderance of trend breaks appears in the 1970s and 1980s where after a negative trend changes in magnitude or direction. Finally, shocks to the top income share data are not transitory, which have consequences for policy such as advocating redistributive measures.
- Published
- 2021
48. Endogenous technical change, employment and distribution in the Goodwin model of the growth cycle.
- Author
-
Tavani, Daniele and Zamparelli, Luca
- Subjects
EMPLOYMENT ,TECHNOLOGICAL innovations ,RESEARCH & development ,ECONOMIC development ,CAPITALISM ,LABOR productivity - Abstract
In this paper, we introduce endogenous technological change through R&D expenditure on labor-augmenting innovation in the cyclical growth model by Goodwin (Goodwin, R. 1967. 'A Growth Cycle.' In Socialism, Capitalism, and Economic Growth, edited by Carl Feinstein, Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press.). Innovation is a costly, forward-looking process financed out of profits, and pursued by owners of capital stock (capitalists) in order to foster labor productivity and save on labor requirements. Our main findings are: (i) Goodwin-type distributive cycles arise even with dynamic optimization, but (ii) endogenous technical change has a dampening effect on economic fluctuations; (iii) steady state per capita growth, income distribution and employment rate are endogenous, and depend on the capitalists' discount rate, the institutional variables regulating the labor market, and policy variables such as subsidies to R&D activity. Implementing the model numerically to match long run data for the US, we show that: (iv) an increase in the capitalists' discount rate lowers per-capita growth, the employment rate and the labor share; (v) an increase in workers' bargaining strength moderately raises the labor share and moderately decreases per-capita growth, while sharply reducing employment: quarterly US fluctuations (1948-2006) in employment and the labor share seem to support this result; (vi) a balanced budget increase in the R&D subsidy also fosters per-capita growth at the expenses of the labor share, even though the corresponding variations might be small. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Piketty and Marginal Productivity Theory.
- Author
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Moseley, Fred
- Subjects
MARGINAL productivity ,DIMINISHING returns ,INCOME inequality ,LABOR theory of value ,LABOR productivity - Abstract
This paper focuses on Piketty’s explanation of the increased capital share of total income in major economies in recent decades presented in chapter 6 of his 2014 book. Piketty’s explanation is presented in terms of the theoretical framework of the marginal productivity theory of distribution. The first section of the paper critically reviews the key elements of marginal productivity theory: production function, marginal products, diminishing returns, and elasticity of substitution. The second section summarizes Piketty’s explanation of the increasing capital share in terms of marginal productivity theory; the third section critically evaluates Piketty’s explanation; and the fourth section briefly presents an alternative heterodox explanation of the increased capital share in recent decades. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Robust determinants of income distribution across and within countries
- Author
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Liang Frank Shao
- Subjects
Employment ,Economics ,Science ,Gross Domestic Product ,Social Sciences ,Education ,Economic inequality ,Sociology ,Income distribution ,0502 economics and business ,Econometrics ,Humans ,Endogeneity ,050207 economics ,Educational Attainment ,050205 econometrics ,Statistical Data ,Income shares ,Human Capital ,Multidisciplinary ,Government Spending ,05 social sciences ,Instrumental variable ,Statistics ,Commerce ,International Trade ,Investment (macroeconomics) ,Probability Theory ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Socioeconomic Factors ,Multicollinearity ,Public Finance ,Labor Economics ,Physical Sciences ,Income ,Medicine ,Educational Status ,Mathematics ,Finance ,Panel data ,Research Article ,Statistical Distributions - Abstract
Multicollinearity widely exists in empirical studies, which leads to imprecise estimation and even endogeneity when omitted variables are correlated with any regressors. We apply an innovative strategy, different from the usual tools (instrumental variable, ridge regression, and least absolute shrinkage and selection operator), to estimate the robust determinants of income distribution. We transform panel data into (quasi-) cross-sectional data by removing country and time effects from the data so that all variables become zero mean and orthogonal to the country dummies and time variable, and multicollinearity becomes very low or even disappears with the quasi-cross sectional data in any specifications regardless of country dummies and time variable being included or not. Our contribution is threefold. First, we build a general method to address the multicollinearity issue in panel data, which is to isolate the common contents of correlated variables and ensures robust estimates in different specifications (dynamic or static specifications) and estimators (within- or between-effects estimators). Second, we find no evidence for the Kuznets hypothesis within and across countries; investment is economically and statistically the most robust determinant of income inequality; meanwhile, labor income share shows robustly and consistently positive effects on income inequality, which challenges the related literature. Last, simulations with our estimates show that the total marginal effects of development (regarding GDP, capital stock and investment) on income inequality are very likely to be positive within and between countries except that the impacts on middle-60% and top-quintile income shares are not so likely to increase income inequality across countries.
- Published
- 2021
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