[en] Although it is heartening to see wealth inequality being taken seriously, key concepts are often muddled, including the distinction between income and wealth, what is included in "wealth", and facts about wealth distributions. This chapter highlights issues that arise in making ideas and facts about wealth inequality precise, and employs newly-available data to take a fresh look at wealth and wealth inequality in a comparative perspective. The composition of wealth is similar across countries, with housing wealth being the key asset. Wealth is considerably more unequally distributed than income, and it is distinctively so in the United States. Extending definitions to include pension wealth however reduces inequality substantially. Analysis also sheds light on life-cycle patterns and the role of inheritance. Discussion of the joint distributions of income and wealth suggests that interactions between increasing top income shares and the concentration of wealth and income from wealth towards the top is critical.
Disciplines :
Social economics Sociology & social sciences
Author, co-author :
Cowell, Frank A.; London School of Economics
Nolan, Brian; University of Oxford
Olivera, Javier; Luxembourg Institute of Socio-Economic Research - LISER
Van Kerm, Philippe ; Luxembourg Institute of Socio-Economic Research - LISER
External co-authors :
yes
Language :
English
Title :
Wealth, Top Incomes, and Inequality
Publication date :
2017
Main work title :
National Wealth: What is Missing, Why it Matters
Editor :
Hamilton, Kirk
Hepburn, Cameron
Publisher :
Oxford University Press, Oxford, UK, Unknown/unspecified