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Review of Income and Wealth

Impact factor: 0.607 5-Year impact factor: 1.086 Print ISSN: 0034-6586 Online ISSN: 1475-4991 Publisher: Wiley Blackwell (Blackwell Publishing)

Subject: Economics

Most recent papers:

  • Introduction to the Special Issue of the Review of Income and Wealth on the IARIW‐OECD Special Conference on the Future of National Accounts: “W(H)ither the SNA?” (Paris, 16–17 April 2015).
    Peter van de Ven, Anne Harrison, Barbara Fraumeni.
    Review of Income and Wealth. October 12, 2017
    There is no abstract available for this paper.
    October 12, 2017   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12330   open full text
  • Relative Deprivation and School Enrolment. Evidence from Mexico.
    Lucio Esposito, Adrián Villaseñor.
    Review of Income and Wealth. October 12, 2017
    Using a large dataset (2.9 million households), we provide solid evidence of relative deprivation as being a negative correlate of school enrolment in Mexico, absolute standard of living being controlled for. This result is robust to a number of specifications, and to the use of linear and less than linear indices of relative deprivation. In addition, we find that marginal effects of relative deprivation are stronger at higher standards of living and for older children.
    October 12, 2017   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12344   open full text
  • Intergenerational Wealth Mobility in France, 19th and 20th Century.
    Jérôme Bourdieu, Lionel Kesztenbaum, Gilles Postel‐Vinay, Akiko Suwa‐Eisenmann.
    Review of Income and Wealth. October 11, 2017
    This paper examines intergenerational wealth mobility between fathers and children in France between 1848 and 1960. Considering wealth mobility in the long run requires taking into account not only positional mobility (that is, how families move within a given distribution of wealth), but also structural mobility induced by changes in the distribution of wealth. Such changes are related to two structural phenomena: in the nineteenth century, the rising number of individuals leaving no estate at death and, after World War I, the decline in the number of the very rich who could live off their wealth. The paper studies the movements between these groups and estimates the intergenerational elasticity of wealth, taking into account the persistence at the bottom and at the top.
    October 11, 2017   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12336   open full text
  • Same Question But Different Answer: Experimental Evidence on Questionnaire Design's Impact on Poverty Measured by Proxies.
    Talip Kilic, Thomas Pave Sohnesen.
    Review of Income and Wealth. September 18, 2017
    Based on a randomized survey experiment that was implemented in Malawi, the study finds that observationally‐equivalent, as well as same, households answer the same questions differently depending on whether they are interviewed with a short questionnaire or its longer counterpart. Statistically significant differences in reporting emerge across all topics and question types. In proxy‐based poverty measurement, these reporting differences lead to significantly different predicted poverty rates and Gini coefficients. The difference in poverty predictions ranges from 3 to 7 percentage points, depending on the model specification. A prediction model based only on the proxies that are elicited prior to the variation in questionnaire design yields identical poverty predictions irrespective of the short‐versus‐long questionnaire treatment. The results are relevant for estimating trends with questionnaires exhibiting inter‐temporal variation in design, impact evaluations administering questionnaires of different length and complexity to treatment and control samples, and development programs utilizing proxy‐means tests for targeting.
    September 18, 2017   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12343   open full text
  • Fuzzy Chronic Poverty: A Proposed Response to Measurement Error for Intertemporal Poverty Measurement.
    Catherine Porter, Gaston Yalonetzky.
    Review of Income and Wealth. August 30, 2017
    A number of chronic poverty measures are now empirically applied to quantify the prevalence and intensity of chronic poverty, vis‐à‐vis transient experiences, using panel data. Welfare trajectories over time are assessed in order to identify the chronically poor and distinguish them from the non‐poor, or the transiently poor, and assess the extent and intensity of intertemporal poverty. We examine the implications of measurement error in the welfare outcome for some popular discontinuous chronic poverty measures, and propose corrections to these measures that seeks to minimize the consequences of measurement error. The approach is based on a novel criterion for the identification of chronic poverty that draws on fuzzy set theory. We illustrate the empirical relevance of the approach with a panel dataset from rural Ethiopia and some simulations.
    August 30, 2017   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12321   open full text
  • Tony Atkinson and his Legacy.
    Rolf Aaberge, François Bourguignon, Andrea Brandolini, Francisco H. G. Ferreira, Janet C. Gornick, John Hills, Markus Jäntti, Stephen P. Jenkins, Eric Marlier, John Micklewright, Brian Nolan, Thomas Piketty, Walter J. Radermacher, Timothy M. Smeeding, Nicholas H. Stern, Joseph Stiglitz, Holly Sutherland.
    Review of Income and Wealth. August 25, 2017
    Tony Atkinson is universally celebrated for his outstanding contributions to the measurement and analysis of inequality, but he never saw the study of inequality as a separate branch of economics. He was an economist in the classical sense, rejecting any sub‐field labelling of his interests and expertise, and he made contributions right across economics. His death on 1 January 2017 deprived the world of both an intellectual giant and a deeply committed public servant in the broadest sense of the term. This collective tribute highlights the range, depth and importance of Tony's enormous legacy, the product of almost fifty years’ work.
    August 25, 2017   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12335   open full text
  • The Roles of Job and Worker Restructuring in Aggregate Wage Growth Dynamics.
    Antti Kauhanen, Mika Maliranta.
    Review of Income and Wealth. August 25, 2017
    We propose an approach for measuring and analyzing the dynamics of the standard aggregate wage growth of macro statistics with micro data. Our method decomposes the aggregate wage growth into the wage growth of job stayers and into various terms related to job and worker restructuring. This method produces explicit expressions with clear interpretations for the various restructuring components. Using comprehensive longitudinal employer–employee data, we study how job and worker restructuring influence the aggregate wage growth and its cyclicality. The results highlight the importance of drawing a sharp distinction between job and worker restructuring in the analysis of aggregate wage growth dynamics.
    August 25, 2017   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12315   open full text
  • Estimating the Level and Distribution of Global Wealth, 2000–2014.
    James B. Davies, Rodrigo Lluberas, Anthony F. Shorrocks.
    Review of Income and Wealth. August 18, 2017
    This paper estimates the level and distribution of household wealth globally, as well as for regions and countries, for the period 2000–2014. The data used are mainly from household surveys and national accounts balance sheets, covering about two thirds of the world's population and over 95% of global household wealth. Lists of the most wealthy published in the media are used to adjust the upper tail. Wealth levels and distributions are imputed for countries without data. Estimated global household wealth stood at USD 251 trillion in 2014, having grown from USD 117 trillion in the year 2000. Wealth per adult in 2014 was USD 53,000. The estimated Gini coefficient of global wealth was 92.2% in 2014 and the share of the top 10% was 88.3%. Wealth inequality fell from 2000 to 2007, with the share of the top 10% falling from 89.4% to 86.5%, before rising steadily to 2014. From 2000 to 2008 the share of financial assets in gross wealth, an important driver of wealth inequality, fell from 55.2% to 50.2%, before climbing to 55.0% in 2014. Household debt rose from 13.6% of gross assets in 2000 to 16.0% in 2008, and has since fallen to 13.9%.
    August 18, 2017   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12318   open full text
  • Unfolding the Turbulent Century: A Reconstruction of China's Historical National Accounts, 1840–1912.
    Ye Ma, Herman de Jong.
    Review of Income and Wealth. August 11, 2017
    This paper reconstructs China's economic development between 1840 and 1912 with an estimation of Gross Domestic Product (GDP). It provides for the first time a time series of GDP (per capita) for the late Qing Dynasty (1644–1911), based on sectoral output and value added, in current as well as in constant prices. The present estimation of per capita GDP in the late Qing period comes out higher than previous estimations, but it still suggests low average levels of Chinese living standards. The economy during the late Qing Empire was characterized by a large and growing agricultural sector and displayed only minor structural changes. Only in the beginning of the twentieth century did the economy start to show signs of growth.
    August 11, 2017   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12314   open full text
  • Income Level and Income Inequality in the Euro‐Mediterranean Region, C. 14–700.
    Branko Milanovic.
    Review of Income and Wealth. August 10, 2017
    Was the Euro‐Mediterranean region at the time of the Roman Empire and its Western successor states more unequal than the European Union today? We use some scant evidence on personal income distribution within the Empire and differences in average regional incomes to conclude that the Empire was more homogeneous, in terms of regional incomes, than today's EU, and inter‐personal inequality was low. Moreover, income inequality was likely less around year 700 than in Augustus's time. The latter finding contrasts with a view of rising inequality as the Western Roman Empire dissolved.
    August 10, 2017   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12329   open full text
  • Differentiating Between Dimensionality and Duration in Multidimensional Measures of Poverty: Methodology with an Application to China.
    Aaron Nicholas, Ranjan Ray, Kompal Sinha.
    Review of Income and Wealth. August 10, 2017
    We develop a multidimensional poverty measure that is sensitive to the within‐individual distribution of deprivations across dimensions and time. Our measure combines features from a static multidimensional measure (Alkire and Foster, ) and a time‐dependent unidimensional measure (Foster, ). The proposed measure separately identifies—and can therefore be decomposed according to—the proportion of the poverty score attributable to: (i) the concentration of deprivations within periods; (ii) the concentration of deprivations within dimensions. In doing so it allows for a poverty ranking that is robust to assumptions about the trade‐off between the two components. Previous measures have not allowed for the features proposed here due to the inability to calculate the exact contribution of each dimension to overall poverty. We overcome this by adapting to our measure the Shapley decomposition proposed in Shorrocks () (based on Shapley, ). The measure is applied to data from China, 2000‐2011.
    August 10, 2017   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12313   open full text
  • Ethnicity, Immigration, and Wealth Fluctuations in the United States.
    Olga Gorbachev, Brendan O'Flaherty, Rajiv Sethi.
    Review of Income and Wealth. August 10, 2017
    Wealth in the United States rose and fell precipitously during the first decade of this century for all major ethnic groups, but the fluctuations in Hispanic wealth were especially extreme. We show that household characteristics and location can account for the Hispanic experience during the boom but not the bust. We argue that the sudden collapse in credit availability to undocumented immigrants at the start of the recession led, through a contraction in demand for the homes of natural sellers in this market, to a loss in wealth far greater than could be predicted based on household characteristics and location alone.
    August 10, 2017   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12317   open full text
  • Aging, Human Capital, and Productivity in France: A Generational Accounting Perspective.
    Xavier Chojnicki, Paul Eliot Rabesandratana.
    Review of Income and Wealth. August 02, 2017
    The aim of this paper is to highlight the potential productivity gains resulting from improvements in the (i) educational attainment and (ii) health status of the working‐age population. For that purpose, we develop a Generational Accounting Model applied to the French economy. Using the conventional methodology of generational accounting, we first estimate the adjustments that will be necessary to ensure the sustainability of French fiscal policy in the long term under the assumption that individual taxes and transfers grow at the same rate as labor productivity. However, this assumption does not account for the explicit determinants of individual productivity. Therefore, we then explain how productivity growth is partly due to the French population's skill level and its health level, which is approximated by the survival rate of adults. We estimate that the increased educational attainment and improved adult survival rate in France generate potentially important productivity gains that could significantly challenge the weight of the burden induced by aging. Therefore, we estimate that this change could reduce the tax burden bequeathed to future generations by 79 percent. Our results are robust to the main assumptions.
    August 02, 2017   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12306   open full text
  • Measuring the Adequacy of Retirement Savings.
    John Burnett, Kevin Davis, Carsten Murawski, Roger Wilkins, Nicholas Wilkinson.
    Review of Income and Wealth. August 02, 2017
    This paper introduces four metrics for quantifying the adequacy of retirement savings, taking into account all major sources of retirement income. We then apply them to projections of expected future retirement income streams of a representative sample of the Australian population aged 40 and above. We find that omitting one or more pillars of savings significantly biases estimates of retirement savings adequacy. We also find that the four metrics are only weakly correlated with key commonly used indicators of financial well‐being, in particular current income and net worth. Our analysis also points to several shortcomings of the widely used income replacement ratio as an indicator of savings adequacy.
    August 02, 2017   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12307   open full text
  • Time Dummy Hedonic and Quality‐Adjusted Unit Value Indexes: Do They Really Differ?
    Jan de Haan, Frances Krsinich.
    Review of Income and Wealth. August 02, 2017
    One of the main approaches to constructing quality‐adjusted price indexes is the time dummy hedonic method. An alternative but rather unconventional method is the estimation of quality‐adjusted unit value indexes. An advantage of the latter method is the interpretation of the implicit quantity index as the simple ratio of quality‐adjusted or standardized quantities. In this paper we compare the two methods. We show that the expenditure‐share weighted time dummy price index and the quality‐adjusted unit value index can be written as ratios of weighted geometric and harmonic means, respectively, of quality‐adjusted prices. Next, we argue that the two indexes will have similar trends and volatility if the quality‐adjusted prices in the quality‐adjusted unit value index are based on the estimated time dummy model. Our theoretical findings are illustrated on New Zealand scanner data for seven consumer electronics products.
    August 02, 2017   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12304   open full text
  • Can Geospatial Data Improve House Price Indexes? A Hedonic Imputation Approach with Splines.
    Robert J. Hill, Michael Scholz.
    Review of Income and Wealth. July 27, 2017
    Determining how and when to use geospatial data (i.e. longitudes and latitudes for each house) is probably the most pressing open question in the house price index literature. This issue is particularly timely for national statistical institutes (NSIs) in the European Union, which are now required by Eurostat to produce official house price indexes. Our solution combines the hedonic imputation method with a flexible hedonic model that captures geospatial data using a non‐parametric spline surface. For Sydney, Australia, we find that the extra precision provided by geospatial data as compared with postcode dummies has only a marginal impact on the resulting hedonic price index. This is good news for resource‐stretched NSIs. At least for Sydney, postcodes seem to be sufficient to control for locational effects in a hedonic house price index.
    July 27, 2017   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12303   open full text
  • On the Decomposition of the Foster and Wolfson Bi‐Polarization Index by Income Sources.
    Elena Bárcena‐Martin, Joseph Deutsch, Jacques Silber.
    Review of Income and Wealth. July 12, 2017
    This paper proposes a simple algorithm based on a matrix formulation to compute the Foster and Wolfson bipolarization index and then to decompose it by income sources. An empirical illustration based on EU‐SILC data for the years 2007 and 2014 shows the usefulness of the proposed decomposition.
    July 12, 2017   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12319   open full text
  • How Important was Labor Reallocation for China's Growth? A Skeptical Assessment.
    Longfeng Ye, Peter E. Robertson.
    Review of Income and Wealth. June 21, 2017
    Numerous studies report the growth effects from labor reallocation in China to be in the order of 1–2 percentage points per year, which would appear to be a significant fraction of China's per capita income growth. We show that the total factor productivity gains are an order of magnitude smaller, at only 0.25 percentage points per year. There are two reasons for this difference. First, the majority of studies have used a decomposition method that effectively assumes linear production functions. This results in values that are much larger than the more appropriate Denison–Kuznets method. Second, we also allow for sectoral differences in human capital. We conclude that the gains from labor reallocation may have been a far less important source of China's growth than is conventionally thought.
    June 21, 2017   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12301   open full text
  • The Unintended Consequences of Flexicurity: The Health Consequences of Flexible Employment.
    Keith A. Bender, Ioannis Theodossiou.
    Review of Income and Wealth. June 05, 2017
    While atypical employment contracts offer flexibility in the labor market, these kinds of contracts are inherently insecure and may generate stress among affected workers. This study examines the impact of atypical forms of employment (specifically seasonal or temporary jobs or a fixed time contracts) on workers' health. Survival analysis shows that, other things equal, the longer percent of time spent in flexible employment contracts increases the odds of falling into ill health for a variety of health conditions. The results are robust to controlling for the endogeneity in the relationship.
    June 05, 2017   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12316   open full text
  • Inequality of Opportunity and Economic Growth: How Much Can Cross‐Country Regressions Really Tell Us?
    Francisco H. G. Ferreira, Christoph Lakner, Maria Ana Lugo, Berk Özler.
    Review of Income and Wealth. June 05, 2017
    Income differences arise from many sources. While some kinds of inequality, caused by differential rewards to effort, might be associated with faster economic growth, other kinds, arising from unequal opportunities for investment, might be detrimental to economic progress. This study uses two new datasets, consisting of 117 income and expenditure household surveys and 134 Demographic and Health Surveys, to revisit the relationship between total inequality and economic growth. In particular, we ask whether inequality of opportunity, driven by circumstances at birth, has a negative effect on subsequent growth. Using the income and expenditure micro dataset, we find that while both total income inequality and inequality of opportunity are negatively associated with growth, the coefficient estimates are insignificant. The evidence is similarly equivocal using the Demographic and Health Surveys data. On balance, the data do not provide support for the hypothesis that inequality of opportunity is bad for growth.
    June 05, 2017   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12311   open full text
  • A Restatement of Equivalence Scales Using Time and Monetary Expenditures Combined with Individual Prices.
    François Gardes, Christophe Starzec.
    Review of Income and Wealth. May 04, 2017
    In the classic equivalence scale estimations based on micro‐econometric analysis, only the costs of market consumption are taken into account. We define the concept of full cost equivalence scales as integrating both monetary and the time use costs and measure it on matched French family budget and time use surveys. These data allow us to define full prices and to estimate equivalence scales conditional to possible substitution through prices. The results show higher full scales than the monetary for the preferred Independent of a Base specification. Relative to the cost of the second adult, the full child cost is also larger than the monetary for matching estimators and the Prais‐Houthakker model. It shows households' capacity to substitute domestic production to market activities. In consequence the measures of income inequality diminish considerably using full income and full equivalence scales.
    May 04, 2017   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12302   open full text
  • A Bayesian Measure of Poverty in the Developing World.
    Zhou Xun, Michel Lubrano.
    Review of Income and Wealth. April 21, 2017
    We propose a new methodology to revise the international poverty line (IPL) after Ravallion et al. (2009) using the same database, but augmented with new variables to take into account social inclusion in the definition of poverty along the lines of Atkinson and Bourguignon (2001). We provide an estimation of the world income distribution and of the corresponding number of poor people in the developing world. Our revised IPL is based on an augmented two‐regime model estimated using a Bayesian approach, which allows us to take into account uncertainty when defining the reference group of countries where the IPL applies. The influence of weighting by population is discussed, as well as the IPL revision proposed in Deaton (2010). We also discuss the impact of using the new 2011 PPP and the recent IPL revision made by the World Bank.
    April 21, 2017   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12295   open full text
  • The Measurement of Capital: Retrieving Initial Values from Panel Data.
    Xi Chen, Tatiana Plotnikova.
    Review of Income and Wealth. April 18, 2017
    A common problem with micro‐level analysis is that capital stock data is missing. Typically, a feasible measure of capital is calculated by accumulating investment flows from an initial value of the capital stock. As the time dimension of most disaggregated data is rather short, the choice of this initial value can have significant effects on the resulting capital estimates. Most empirical studies impute the initial value using a single arbitrary proxy. In this paper, we propose a panel data framework that assigns weighting coefficients to multiple proxy variables. We conduct a series of Monte Carlo experiments to test the performance of the proposed method and apply the method to a U.S. manufacturing dataset. The results suggest that our method improves the approximation of the capital stock and thus in turn reduces the bias in the production function estimation.
    April 18, 2017   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12300   open full text
  • Cross‐Country Income Differences Revisited: Accounting for the Role of Intangible Capital.
    Wen Chen.
    Review of Income and Wealth. April 18, 2017
    This paper develops a new intangible investment database that is consistent and internationally comparable for a set of 60 economies over the period 1995–2011. I find that over time a growing share of total investment consists of intangible assets, rather than investment in tangible assets, like machinery and buildings. Across countries, the level of economic development of a country is positively associated with its investment intensity in intangibles. By including intangible capital as an additional production factor, this paper finds that we can account for substantially more of the variation in cross‐country income levels. Depending on the assumptions regarding the output elasticities of factor inputs, the observed differences in intangible capital can account for up to 16 percentage points of the cross‐country income variation.
    April 18, 2017   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12305   open full text
  • How Fast are Semiconductor Prices Falling?
    David M. Byrne, Stephen D. Oliner, Daniel E. Sichel.
    Review of Income and Wealth. April 12, 2017
    The Producer Price Index (PPI) for the U.S. suggests that semiconductor prices have barely been falling in recent years, a dramatic contrast to the rapid declines reported from the mid‐1980s to the early 2000s. This slowdown in the rate of decline is puzzling in light of evidence that the performance of microprocessor units (MPUs) has continued to improve at a rapid pace. Over the course of the 2000s, the MPU prices posted by Intel, the dominant producer of MPUs, became much stickier over the chips' life cycle. As a result of this change, we argue that the matched‐model methodology used in the PPI for MPUs likely started to be biased after the early 2000s and that hedonic indexes can provide a more accurate measure of price change since then. MPU prices fell rapidly through 2004 on every price measure we present, with the PPI declining at an even quicker pace than the hedonic indexes. However, from 2004 to 2009, our preferred hedonic index fell faster than the PPI, and from 2009 to 2013 the gap widened further, with our preferred index falling at an average annual rate of 42 percent, while the PPI declined at only a 6 percent rate. Given that MPUs currently represent about half of U.S. shipments of semiconductors, this difference has important implications for gauging the rate of innovation in the semiconductor sector.
    April 12, 2017   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12308   open full text
  • Energy Subsidy Reform and Poverty in Arab Countries: A Comparative CGE‐Microsimulation Analysis of Egypt and Jordan.
    John Cockburn, Véronique Robichaud, Luca Tiberti.
    Review of Income and Wealth. April 10, 2017
    This study simulates the macroeconomic and distributive impacts of real proposed (by local policy makers) energy subsidy reforms in Egypt and Jordan. To do that, we develop a dynamic CGE‐microsimulation model that is able to reconcile the general equilibrium effects of the reform and the individual‐ and household‐specific distributive effects. While the nature of the proposed reforms differs in the two countries, the study underscores the need, in both countries, for reform to generate fiscal savings to boost private investment and increase economic growth. It also shows that the reform alone would further exacerbate poverty through increased consumer prices. However, a modest reinvestment of fiscal savings into cash transfers creates a win‐win scenario of reduced poverty without significantly sacrificing the fiscal and growth benefits from the reform. Impacts (prices, growth, fiscal savings, poverty) are greater in Egypt due to the extent of proposed reforms and the fact that a larger share of the energy products concerned are consumed directly by households, while in Jordan the major effects come from the increase in intermediate input costs which generate a fall in the aggregate demand and, so, in labor demand.
    April 10, 2017   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12309   open full text
  • Second‐Order Discrimination and Generalized Lorenz Dominance.
    Rafael Salas, John A. Bishop, Lester A. Zeager.
    Review of Income and Wealth. April 10, 2017
    We propose a definition of second‐order discrimination that does not require the reference distribution to first‐order dominate the comparison one, and allows rankings of discrimination patterns when both the reference and the comparison distributions differ. It involves comparing the probabilities that randomly selected individuals in the reference and comparison distributions belong to subgroups having the same cumulative mean income, yields orderings of distributions equivalent to those from generalized Lorenz dominance, and allows orderings of discrimination patterns, partial or complete, across pairs of distributions. We compare discrimination against U.S. seniors (inter‐distributional inequality between seniors and non‐seniors) by ethnicity.
    April 10, 2017   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12310   open full text
  • Literacy and the Migrant–Native Wage Gap.
    Oliver Himmler, Robert Jäckle.
    Review of Income and Wealth. March 23, 2017
    Being able to read and write is one of the most important skills in modern economies. Literacy frequently is a prerequisite for employment and its relevance for productivity and wages is magnified by the fact that it is only through literacy that many other skills become usable. More so than for natives, this argument applies to migrants: even those with high levels of human capital acquired in the country of origin often have it rendered worthless by the absence of literacy in the host‐country language. Using novel data from a large‐scale German adult literacy test (“leo.—Level‐One Studie”, or “LEO”), we investigate the determinants of literacy and show that migrants have systematically lower language skills than natives. We find that any observed raw employment and wage gaps between natives and migrants can be fully explained by these differences.
    March 23, 2017   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12299   open full text
  • Inequality of Opportunity in Wages and Consumption in Egypt.
    Ragui Assaad, Caroline Krafft, John Roemer, Djavad Salehi‐Isfahani.
    Review of Income and Wealth. March 22, 2017
    Most explanations of the recent political upheavals in Egypt since 2011 include a reference to rising inequality, but the usual indicators of income inequality in Egypt do not support that inequality was on the rise prior to the uprisings. In this paper we provide measures of inequality of opportunity in wages and consumption for Egypt at different points in time from 1988 to 2012 that shed light on the gap between popular perceptions and measured indices of inequality. Our findings indicate that although measures of inequality of wage income have increased over time in Egypt starting in 1998, the share attributable to circumstances declined steadily throughout the whole period. We attribute this decline to the fact that outcomes for individuals from a middle class background have moved closer to the outcomes of those from a poor background. The outcomes for those from privileged backgrounds remain quite apart from the rest.
    March 22, 2017   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12289   open full text
  • Wealth Inequality in Sweden: What can we Learn from Capitalized Income Tax Data?
    Jacob Lundberg, Daniel Waldenström.
    Review of Income and Wealth. March 13, 2017
    This paper presents new estimates of wealth inequality in Sweden during 2000–2012, linking wealth register data up to 2007 and individually capitalized wealth based on income and property tax registers for the period thereafter when a repeal of the wealth tax stopped the collection of individual wealth statistics. We find that wealth inequality increased after 2007 and that more unequal bank holdings and housing appear to be important drivers. We also evaluate the performance of the capitalization method by contrasting its estimates and their dispersion with observed stocks in register data up to 2007. The goodness‐of‐fit varies tremendously across assets and we conclude that although capitalized wealth estimates may well approximate overall inequality levels and trends, they are highly sensitive to assumptions and the quality of the underlying data sources.
    March 13, 2017   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12294   open full text
  • Multidimensional Inequality Across Three Developed Countries.
    Nicholas Rohde, Ross Guest.
    Review of Income and Wealth. March 10, 2017
    This paper produces comparable estimates of multidimensional inequality for the U.S., Germany, and Australia. Two alternative approaches with differing interpretations are employed. The first method projects all facets of welfare onto a single variable which is then analyzed using standard univariate techniques. The second approach establishes equivalent‐income distributions that would lead to an equalization of welfare, such that the difference between this counterfactual and the true income distribution can be measured. This difference is then interpreted as the degree of income redistribution required to offset welfare inequality. Using data on permanent incomes, health scores, years of education, and leisure times, we observe much higher levels of inequality in the U.S. than in Germany or Australia. Our results are highly statistically significant and hold over a large variety of weighting specifications.
    March 10, 2017   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12292   open full text
  • A Framework for the Simultaneous Measurement of Spatial Variation and Temporal Movement in Prices in a Heterogeneous Country: The Dynamic Household Regional Product Dummy Model.
    Manisha Chakrabarty, Amita Majumder, Ranjan Ray.
    Review of Income and Wealth. February 20, 2017
    This paper contributes to the growing literature on spatial prices in large heterogeneous countries. While the literatures on spatial variation and temporal movement in prices have grown in parallel, this study marks a departure by providing a unified treatment and proposing a comprehensive framework that allows both approaches. The proposed model is based on twin extensions of the household version of the “country product dummy model” by allowing for a dynamic stochastic specification and interdependence of spatial prices of geographically adjacent regions. Tests of temporal stability and regional independence of the estimated spatial prices are proposed and applied in this paper. The paper shows that the introduction of an autoregressive error process of order one, AR(1), improves the efficiency of the estimates of parameters, urban‐rural and temporal price indices under certain conditions. The Indian application points to a rich potential for using the proposed framework in cross country comparisons such as the International Comparison Program (ICP) exercises.
    February 20, 2017   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12266   open full text
  • A Broken Social Contract, Not High Inequality, Led to the Arab Spring.
    Shantayanan Devarajan, Elena Ianchovichina.
    Review of Income and Wealth. February 20, 2017
    During the 2000s, expenditure inequality in Arab countries was low or moderate and, in many cases, declining. Different measures of wealth inequality were also lower than elsewhere. Yet, there were revolutions in four countries and protests in several others. We explain this so‐called “inequality puzzle” by first noting that, despite favorable income inequality measures, subjective well‐being measures in Arab countries were relatively low and falling sharply, especially for the middle class, and in the countries where the uprisings were most intense. The increasing unhappiness, reflected in perceptions of declining standards of living, was associated with dissatisfaction with the quality of public services, the shortage of formal‐sector jobs, and corruption. These sources of dissatisfaction suggest that the old social contract, where government provided jobs, free education and health, and subsidized food and fuel, in return for the subdued voice of the population, was broken. The Arab Spring and its aftermath indicates the need for a new social contract, one where government promotes private‐sector jobs and accountability in service delivery, and citizens are active participants in the economy and society.
    February 20, 2017   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12288   open full text
  • Measuring Inequality by Asset Indices: A General Approach with Application to South Africa.
    Martin Wittenberg, Murray Leibbrandt.
    Review of Income and Wealth. February 20, 2017
    Asset indices are widely used, particularly in the analysis of Demographic and Health Surveys, where they have been routinely constructed as “wealth indices.” Such indices have been externally validated in a number of contexts. Nevertheless, we show that they often fail an internal validity test, that is, ranking individuals with “rural” assets below individuals with no assets at all. We consider from first principles what sort of indexes might make sense, given the predominantly dummy variable nature of asset schedules. We show that there is, in fact, a way to construct an asset index which does not violate some basic principles and which also has the virtue that it can be used to construct “asset inequality” measures. However, there is a need to pay careful attention to the components of the index. We show this with South African data.
    February 20, 2017   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12286   open full text
  • Consensus Income Distribution.
    Oded Stark, Fryderyk Falniowski, Marcin Jakubek.
    Review of Income and Wealth. February 17, 2017
    In determining the optimal redistribution of a given population's income, we ask which factor is more important: the social planner's aversion to inequality, embedded in an isoelastic social welfare function indexed by a parameter alpha, or the individuals' concern at having a low relative income, indexed by a parameter beta in a utility function that is a convex combination of (absolute) income and low relative income. Assuming that the redistribution comes at a cost (because only a fraction of a taxed income can be transferred), we find that there exists a critical level of beta below which different isoelastic social planners choose different optimal allocations of incomes. However, if beta is above that critical level, all isoelastic social planners choose the same allocation of incomes because they then find that an equal distribution of incomes maximizes social welfare regardless of the magnitude of alpha.
    February 17, 2017   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12291   open full text
  • Accounting for Cross‐Country Differences in Wealth Inequality.
    Frank Cowell, Eleni Karagiannaki, Abigail Mcknight.
    Review of Income and Wealth. February 17, 2017
    There is considerable cross‐country variation in levels of household wealth and in wealth inequality. This paper assesses the extent to which these differences can be accounted for by differences in the distributions of households' demographic and economic characteristics. A counterfactual decomposition analysis of micro data from five countries (Italy, U.K., U.S., Sweden and Finland) is used to identify the effects of characteristics on component wealth holdings, their value and their distribution. The findings of the paper suggest that the biggest share of cross‐country differences is not attributable to the distribution of household demographic and economic characteristics but rather reflect strong unexplained country effects.
    February 17, 2017   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12278   open full text
  • How Fat is the Top Tail of the Wealth Distribution?
    Philip Vermeulen.
    Review of Income and Wealth. February 17, 2017
    Differential unit non‐response in household wealth surveys biases estimates of top tail wealth shares downward. Using Monte Carlo evidence, I show that adding only a few extreme observations to wealth surveys is sufficient to remove the downward bias. Combining extreme wealth observations from Forbes World's billionaires with the Survey of Consumer Finances, the Wealth and Assets Survey, and the Household Finance and Consumption Survey, I provide new improved estimates of top tail wealth in the United States, the United Kingdom, and nine euro area countries. These new estimates indicate significantly higher top wealth shares than those calculated from the wealth surveys alone.
    February 17, 2017   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12279   open full text
  • Debt Overhang and Deleveraging in the US Household Sector: Gauging the Impact on Consumption.
    Bruno Albuquerque, Georgi Krustev.
    Review of Income and Wealth. February 10, 2017
    Using a novel data set for the U.S. states, this paper examines whether household debt and the protracted debt deleveraging help explain the dismal performance of U.S. consumption since 2007 in the aftermath of the housing bubble. By separating the concepts of deleveraging and debt overhang—a flow and a stock effect—we find that excessive indebtedness exerted a meaningful drag on consumption over and beyond wealth and income effects. The overall effect, however, is modest—‐around one sixth of the slowdown in consumption between 2000–06 and 2007–12—and mostly driven by states with particularly large imbalances in their household sector. This might be indicative of non‐linearities, whereby indebtedness begins to bite only when misalignments from sustainable debt dynamics become excessive.
    February 10, 2017   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12265   open full text
  • FGT Old‐Age Poverty Measures and the Mortality Paradox: Theory and Evidence.
    Mathieu Lefèbvre, Pierre Pestieau, Gregory Ponthiere.
    Review of Income and Wealth. February 07, 2017
    Income‐differentiated mortality, by reducing the share of poor persons in the population, leads to the “Mortality Paradox”: the worse the survival conditions of the poor are, the lower is the measured poverty. We show that FGT measures (Foster et al., ) are, in general, not robust to variations in survival conditions. Then, following Kanbur and Mukherjee (), we propose to adjust FGT poverty measures by extending the income profiles of the prematurely dead, and we identify the condition under which so‐adjusted FGT measures are robust to mortality changes. Finally, we show, on the basis of data from 2007 on old‐age poverty in 11 European economies, that the effect of extending income profiles of the prematurely dead on poverty measurement varies with: (1) the fictitious income assigned to the prematurely dead; (2) the degree of poverty aversion; (3) the shape of the (unadjusted) income distribution; and (4) the strength of the income/mortality relationship.
    February 07, 2017   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12277   open full text
  • Does Economic Insecurity Cause Weight Gain Among Canadian Labor Force Participants?
    Barry Watson.
    Review of Income and Wealth. February 03, 2017
    The National Population Health Survey (NPHS) suggests that for labor force participants age 25 to 64, the prevalence of self‐reported obesity in Canada has increased from 16 percent in 1998 to 23 percent in 2008. Using six cycles of NPHS data (1998–2009), I explore Canada's obesity dilemma by considering the effect of economic insecurity—measured as the probability of an individual experiencing a severe negative economic shock. As an identification strategy, a fixed effects model is employed to control for unobserved time‐invariant heterogeneity and a set of instruments based on an individual's economic environment are specified in order to isolate causality. Results suggest that for males age 25 to 64, a 1 percent increase in economic insecurity is predicted to increase their body mass index (BMI) by 0.10 points. For females age 25 to 64, the association between economic insecurity and BMI is statistically insignificant at conventional confidence levels.
    February 03, 2017   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12293   open full text
  • On the Measurement of the Overall Degree of Income Stratification between Groups.
    Paul Allanson.
    Review of Income and Wealth. January 25, 2017
    This paper proposes a new class of indices that measure overall stratification between groups in a population and can be decomposed as population‐weighted averages of pairwise indices. The indices capture not only the extent to which groups form well‐defined strata in the income distribution but also the scale of the resultant differences in equally distributed equivalent incomes between them, where these two factors play the same role as identification and alienation respectively in the measurement of polarization. The properties of the class as a whole are investigated as well as those of selected members of it: zeroth and first power indices may be interpreted as measuring the overall incidence and depth of stratification respectively, while second and higher power indices members are directly sensitive to the severity of stratification between groups. An illustrative application provides an empirical analysis of global income stratification by regions in 1993.
    January 25, 2017   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12290   open full text
  • The Gender Wealth Gap Across European Countries.
    Alyssa Schneebaum, Miriam Rehm, Katharina Mader, Katarina Hollan.
    Review of Income and Wealth. January 23, 2017
    This paper studies the gap in wealth between male and female single households using 2010 Household Finance and Consumption Survey data for eight European countries. In the raw data, a large gap emerges at the upper end of the unconditional distribution. While OLS estimates show no difference in average net wealth levels, quantile regressions at the 95th percentile yield mixed evidence for the gender wealth gap in different specifications. Labour market characteristics and participation in asset and debt categories largely explain the differences between male and female single households. The gender gap in net wealth is driven by gaps in gross wealth and its components, but is attenuated in four countries by gender gaps in (collateralized) debt. In the full specification, the unexplained gap in gross wealth amounts to 27 percent in Slovakia, 33 percent in France, 44 percent in Austria, 45 percent in Germany, and 48 percent in Greece.
    January 23, 2017   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12281   open full text
  • Modelling Heterogeneous Preferences for Income Redistribution–An Application of Continuous and Discrete Distributions.
    Christian Pfarr, Andreas Schmid, Morten Raun Mørkbak.
    Review of Income and Wealth. January 16, 2017
    This paper investigates observable and unobservable heterogeneity in individuals’ preferences for redistribution—differentiating the desired overall volume of redistribution and who should receive benefits, subsidies, or transfers. We use data from a discrete choice experiment (DCE) conducted in the field and based on a representative sample of the German voting‐age population. Applying random parameters and latent class models, our results show that latent and potentially discontinuously distributed factors must be accounted for, as they heavily impact the interpretation of the findings. We find considerable heterogeneity in redistribution preferences, clearly identifying three distinct subgroups. While all groups are in favor of redistribution, they differ regarding the preferred allocation of the redistributive budget.
    January 16, 2017   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12282   open full text
  • Cross‐Subsidies, and the Elasticity of Informality to Social Expenditures: The Case of Mexico's Seguro Popular.
    Jorge Alonso‐Ortiz, Julio Leal.
    Review of Income and Wealth. January 13, 2017
    How is the size of the informal sector affected when the distribution of social expenditures across formal and informal workers changes? How is it affected when the tax rate changes along with the generosity of these transfers? In our search model, taxes are levied on formal‐sector workers as a proportion of their wage. Transfers, in contrast, are lump‐sum and are received by both formal and informal workers. This implies that high‐wage formal workers subsidize low‐wage formal workers as well as informal workers. We calibrate the model to Mexico and perform counterfactuals. We find that the size of the informal sector is quite inelastic to changes in taxes and transfers. This is due to the presence of search frictions and to the cross‐subsidy in our model: for low‐wage formal jobs, a tax increase is roughly offset by an increase in benefits, leaving the unemployed approximately indifferent. Our results are consistent with the empirical evidence on the recent introduction of the “Seguro Popular” healthcare program.
    January 13, 2017   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12284   open full text
  • The Perception of Inequality of Opportunity in Europe.
    Paolo Brunori.
    Review of Income and Wealth. December 29, 2016
    Does the way in which scholars measure inequality of opportunity correspond to how people perceive it? What other factors influence individual perception of this phenomenon? To answer these questions, we must first clarify how scholars define and measure inequality of opportunity. We discuss the possible mechanisms linking objective measures to subjective perception of the phenomenon, then propose a measure of perceived inequality of opportunity, and finally test our hypothesis by merging data from two sources: the European Union Statistics on Income and Living Conditions (2011) and the International Social Survey Programme (2009). We suggest that the prevailing perception of the degree of unequal opportunity in a large sample of respondents is only weakly correlated with its objective measure. We estimate a multilevel model considering both individual‐ and country‐level controls to explain individual perception of unequal opportunity. Our estimates suggest that the two most adopted measures of inequality of opportunity have no clear role in explaining its perception. Conversely, other country‐level variables and personal experiences of intergenerational social mobility are important determinants of how inequality of opportunity is perceived.
    December 29, 2016   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12259   open full text
  • Getting Rental Prices Right for Computers: Reconciling Different Perspectives on Depreciation.
    Erwin Diewert, Hui Wei.
    Review of Income and Wealth. December 28, 2016
    National statistical agencies frequently assume high geometric depreciation rates for computers. However, typically the service flow that a computer generates over its useful life is roughly constant, which contradicts the geometric model of depreciation. A one hoss shay model of depreciation seems to be more appropriate for computers. The paper uses Australian data on computer investment over the past 25 years to construct one hoss shay estimates of computer capital stocks and flows and considers how best to approximate these more realistic models of depreciation with a geometric model. The paper shows that under certain assumptions, a geometric model can provide an exact approximation to an underlying one hoss shay model. This exactness result is extended to a more general model of depreciation, the Constant Efficiency Profile model. Finally, the paper shows how well the geometric approximation fits a one hoss shay model when the assumptions are not satisfied.
    December 28, 2016   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12249   open full text
  • Evolutions in Consumption Inequality and Poverty in Greece: The Impact of the Crisis and Austerity Policies.
    Georgia Kaplanoglou, Vassilis T. Rapanos.
    Review of Income and Wealth. December 13, 2016
    Greece is the country hit hardest by the crisis and subsequent fiscal consolidation strategies, suffering a cumulative output loss of about 30 percent since 2008. The present paper presents evidence that along with declining average living standards, consumption inequality has seriously grown, fueled primarily by a disproportionate drop in the consumption levels of what can be considered the middle class. Although poverty has not significantly risen in relative terms, it climbs to around 45 percent once the poverty threshold is anchored to pre‐crisis levels. Furthermore, significant indirect tax hikes have further increased inequality in consumption expenditure. The paper also shows that several reforms launched in the name of reducing labor costs, broadening the tax base or rationalizing the targeting of social benefits have had detrimental effects on one of the most vulnerable population groups, namely families with children, thus implying that the social consequences of the crisis will be long‐lasting.
    December 13, 2016   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12287   open full text
  • The Effect of Benefit Reductions on the Retirement Age: The Heterogeneous Response of Manual and Non‐Manual Workers.
    Matthias Giesecke.
    Review of Income and Wealth. November 23, 2016
    I estimate the effect of benefit reductions on the timing of retirement. The introduction of actuarial adjustments in the German public pension system serves as a source of exogenous variation to estimate discrete time transition rates into retirement for individuals of age 60–66. Responses to benefit reductions are elaborated separately for manual and non‐manual workers. On average, individuals postpone retirement by 13.2 months if pension benefits are reduced by 3.6 percent for each year of early retirement. This result is in line with the previous quasi‐experimental literature and suggests that people respond to the incentive of reducing the implicit tax on further periods of work. However, among men the response is about 50 percent lower for manual workers compared to non‐manual workers. Surprisingly, this does not necessarily indicate that retirement incomes of manual workers deteriorate. The explanation is that disability pensions are available at age 63—without benefit reductions.
    November 23, 2016   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12257   open full text
  • The Contribution of Intangible Assets to Sectoral Productivity Growth in the EU.
    Thomas Niebel, Mary O'Mahony, Marianne Saam.
    Review of Income and Wealth. November 17, 2016
    In this paper, we report on new data on intangible investment at the level of one‐digit NACE industries of ten European Union (EU) countries. The data are constructed as a sectoral breakdown by using as control totals the INTAN‐Invest database, which contains measures of intangible investment at the level of the aggregate business sector. With the sectoral data, we assess the contribution of intangibles to productivity growth based on growth accounting and econometric estimation of production functions. The growth accounting contribution of intangibles to labor productivity growth is generally highest in manufacturing and finance. The estimated output elasticity of intangibles lies between 0.1 and 0.2, above factor shares but considerably below values found in previous research using aggregate data.
    November 17, 2016   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12248   open full text
  • Can Poverty be Alleviated in China?
    Cong Qin, Terence Tai Leung Chong.
    Review of Income and Wealth. November 17, 2016
    The 2000s witnessed the third poverty alleviation wave in China. Compared with its predecessors, the third wave distinguished itself by new interventions and redefined standards for the National Poor Counties. This paper evaluates the effectiveness of the new program using a data set consisting of 1,411 of China's western and central counties from 2000 to 2010. It combines the propensity score matching method with the difference‐in‐differences approach, which helps to avoid selection bias and track the policy impact on variables of interest at each time point. It is found that the non‐western local governments tended to manipulate data on income and output growth to maintain the special transfer payments disbursed exclusively to the National Poor Counties. It is also shown that the program failed to improve the infrastructure and sanitary conditions in general.
    November 17, 2016   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12273   open full text
  • A Multidimensional Poverty Index for Latin America.
    Maria Emma Santos, Pablo Villatoro.
    Review of Income and Wealth. November 11, 2016
    This paper proposes a new Multidimensional Poverty Index for Latin America. The index combines monetary and non‐monetary indicators, updates deprivation cut‐offs for certain traditional unsatisfied basic needs indicators and includes some new indicators, aiming to maximize regional comparability within the data constraints. The index is estimated for 17 countries of the region at two points in time—one around 2005 and the other around 2012. Overall, we estimate about 28 percent of people are multidimensionally poor in 2012 in the region. We find statistically significant reductions of poverty in most countries, both in terms of incidence and intensity over the period under analysis. However, important disparities between rural and urban areas remain. Statistical scrutiny of the index suggests that it captures the state of poverty relatively well while maintaining a certain parsimony and being highly robust to changes in weights, indicators, and poverty cut‐off.
    November 11, 2016   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12275   open full text
  • Take‐Up of Social Assistance Benefits: The Case of the French Homeless.
    Sylvain Chareyron, Patrick Domingues.
    Review of Income and Wealth. November 07, 2016
    A considerable number of studies have been conducted to measure and analyze the phenomenon of the non‐take‐up of social assistance. However, the homeless portion of this population has long remained outside the scope of this research, so that little is known about their non‐take‐up behavior. In this paper, we focus on this population using a French national survey and we derive measures for the non‐take‐up of French basic income support. Our findings indicate that there is a substantial rate of non‐take‐up among the homeless, but that this rate is lower than that for the general population: approximately 18% of eligible homeless persons do not claim benefits compared to 35% of the general population. Using a large set of variables, we investigate the determinants of non‐take‐up. We show that although some of these determinants are shared with the general population, as identified in the literature, the homeless population exhibits some particularities. Furthermore, our results also suggest that the poorest of the homeless have a larger non‐take‐up rate than other homeless.
    November 07, 2016   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12274   open full text
  • Evaluating Patterns of Income Growth when Status Matters: A Robust Approach.
    Flaviana Palmisano.
    Review of Income and Wealth. November 07, 2016
    This paper addresses the problem of ranking growth episodes from a microeconomic perspective. While most of the existing criteria, framed in the pro‐poor growth tradition, are either based on anonymous individuals or are used to identify them on the basis of their status in the initial period, this paper proposes new criteria to evaluate growth, which are robust to the choice of the reference period used to identify individuals. Suitable dominance conditions that can be used to rank alternative growth processes are derived by means of an axiomatic approach. Moreover, the theoretical results are used to rank the different growth episodes that have taken place in the past decade in Australia, Germany, Korea, Switzerland, and the U.S.
    November 07, 2016   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12272   open full text
  • The Theil Indices in Parametric Families of Income Distributions—A Short Review.
    José María Sarabia, Vanesa Jordá, Lorena Remuzgo.
    Review of Income and Wealth. November 02, 2016
    The Theil indices (Theil, ) are widely used measures for studying the degree of concentration and inequality in size income distributions. Their property of decomposability makes these indices especially useful in applied economic analysis. This paper is a synthetic review of the Theil indices for the most important and popular parametric income distributions. Extensions to higher dimensions are sketched.
    November 02, 2016   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12260   open full text
  • Cross‐Sectional Versus Panel Income Approaches: Analyzing Income Distribution Changes for the Case of Mexico.
    Robert Duval‐Hernández, Gary S. Fields, George H. Jakubson.
    Review of Income and Wealth. October 05, 2016
    In this paper we reconcile, both theoretically and empirically, changes in cross‐sectional inequality with patterns of panel income changes during periods of economic growth and decline. Using panel earnings data from Mexico, we find that the panel changes are convergent in almost every period, the reason being that a large number of individuals experience small convergent earnings changes while a small number of individuals experience large and convergent earnings changes. We examine what accounts for the inequality of log‐earnings at a point in time and for the inequality of the log of earnings averaged over five quarters. We find that the equalization brought about by panel earnings changes is mainly associated with changes in employment status and in sector of employment and not by personal characteristics such as schooling, age, and gender.
    October 05, 2016   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12271   open full text
  • Response to “Growth in Earnings and Health: Nothing is as Practical as a Good Theory”.
    Timothy J. Halliday.
    Review of Income and Wealth. October 03, 2016
    There is no abstract available for this paper.
    October 03, 2016   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12244   open full text
  • Industry Wages Across Countries and Over Time: A New Database of Micro Survey Data.
    Van Ha Le, Jakob De Haan, Erik Dietzenbacher.
    Review of Income and Wealth. September 29, 2016
    This paper presents a newly collected database on industry wages. The underlying data are micro datasets collected through nationally representative household surveys which are mostly conducted by national statistical agencies. In comparison with wage measures based on macroeconomic data sources, we find that industry wages based on micro survey data are more reliable. Furthermore, data from nationally representative micro surveys are becoming increasingly available, thus allowing for better coverage, especially of low‐income countries. The database provides a reliable source of data for research on inter‐industry wage structures and gender wage differentials, across countries and over time. It may also serve as a basis for further research on the determinants and implications of inter‐industry and gender wage variations.
    September 29, 2016   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12264   open full text
  • On the Limitations of Some Current Usages of the Gini Index.
    Lars Osberg.
    Review of Income and Wealth. September 28, 2016
    This note constructs a simple two class example in which the Gini index is held constant while the size of the rich and poor populations change, in order to illustrate how very different societies can have the same Gini index and produce very similar estimates of standard inequality averse Social Welfare Functions. The rich/poor income ratio can vary by a factor of over 12, and the income share of the top one per cent can vary by a factor of over 16, with exactly the same Gini index. Focussing solely on the Gini index can thus obscure perceptions—e.g. of important market income trends or large changes in the redistributive impact of the tax and transfer system. Hence, analysts should supplement the use of an aggregate summary index of inequality with direct examination of the segments of the income distribution which they think are of greatest importance.
    September 28, 2016   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12256   open full text
  • The National Wealth–Income Ratio in Greece, 1974–2013.
    Nikolaos Charalampidis.
    Review of Income and Wealth. September 28, 2016
    Can the rise of wealth–income ratios observed in rich economies be found in the case of Greece as well? This paper uses a generalization of a two‐good wealth accumulation equation to estimate the evolution of the national wealth–income ratio, and finds that, similarly to the European evidence, the ratio rises from about 280 percent in the 1970s to about 500 percent on the eve of the current financial crisis. On average, during 1974–96, the saving‐induced wealth growth cancels out the capital losses, whereas in the subsequent decade, 1997–2007, the balance changes considerably when the saving effect vanishes and the prolonged capital gains result in a rising wealth–income ratio. During the recession, income falls faster than wealth. The results remain robust to several alterations of the benchmark framework.
    September 28, 2016   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12258   open full text
  • Migration and Discrimination in Urban China: A Decomposition Approach.
    Debayan Pakrashi, Paul Frijters.
    Review of Income and Wealth. September 28, 2016
    Currently, about 150 million migrant workers reside in the major Chinese cities, where they are treated like second‐class citizens by the local city governments and denied access to government jobs and welfare entitlements, with large differences existing in their treatment across the cities. In this paper, we use a new and unique dataset of urban natives and rural to urban migrants from 15 different cities in China to document this differential treatment. We apply a relatively new non‐parametric technique, Nopo decomposition, which takes into account differences in the distribution of observable characteristics to decompose the wage gap that exists between the two groups and estimate the extent of discrimination faced by the migrants. Rural‐to‐urban migrants are found to be discriminated in the urban labour market, but to a lesser extent than has been argued in the literature. We also find that a large gap exists between the national legislation on the treatment of migrants on one hand and the implementation and enforcement by city governments on the other, and that this differential treatment helps explain part of the level of discrimination.
    September 28, 2016   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12245   open full text
  • Offshoring, Sourcing Substitution Bias, and the Measurement of Growth in U.S. Gross Domestic Product and Productivity.
    Marshall Reinsdorf, Robert Yuskavage.
    Review of Income and Wealth. September 13, 2016
    The decade before the financial crisis of 2008 was a time of large changes in sourcing patterns for manufactured goods, particularly after China's entry into the WTO in 2001. Sourcing substitution reduced the prices paid by wholesale level buyers of these goods, but these price reductions were mostly not captured in the U.S. import price indexes and the U.S. GDP deflator. To find plausible values for sourcing bias we first use data on changes in sourcing patterns over 1997–2007 to predict the effect of the reported price discount from the new emerging market suppliers. Next, we compare adjusted import price indexes for products used for household consumption with consumer price indexes. In the GDP deflator for apparel imports, sourcing bias is found to average 0.6 percent per year, and for durable goods it averages 1 percent per year. During the decade of rapidly changing sourcing patterns, a tenth of the reported speedup in multifactor productivity growth of the U.S. private business sector may have come from sourcing bias in the deflators for imports.
    September 13, 2016   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12263   open full text
  • Spillovers from R&D and Other Intangible Investment: Evidence from UK Industries.
    Peter Goodridge, Jonathan Haskel, Gavin Wallis.
    Review of Income and Wealth. September 08, 2016
    Many agree that evidence exists consistent with spillovers from R&D. But is there any evidence of spillovers from a broader range of intangibles, such as software, design or training? We collect investment data for these wider intangibles for a panel of seven UK industries 1992–2007. Using the industry‐level method in the R&D literature, e.g. Griliches (), we regress industry TFP growth on lagged external knowledge stock growth, where the latter are outside industry measures weighted by matrices based on (a) flows of intermediate consumption or (b) workers. Our main new result is that we find (controlling for time and industry effects) statistically significant correlations between TFP growth and knowledge stock growth in (a) external R&D and (b) total intangibles (excluding R&D). We show our results are robust to controls for imperfect competition and non‐constant returns; likewise they are robust to including foreign R&D, and other controls, and various lags.
    September 08, 2016   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12251   open full text
  • Productivity Measurement with Natural Capital.
    Nicola Brandt, Paul Schreyer, Vera Zipperer.
    Review of Income and Wealth. August 25, 2016
    This paper proposes a measurement framework that explicitly accounts for the role of natural capital in productivity measurement. It is applied to aggregate economy data from the OECD Productivity Database, with natural capital data from the World Bank. It is shown that the direction of the adjustment to productivity growth depends on the rate of change of natural capital extraction relative to the rate of change of other inputs. The extended framework also makes the contribution of natural capital to economic growth explicit. This can be useful for countries relying on non‐renewable resources to better understand the need to develop other sources of growth—human or productive capital—to prepare for times of scarcer resource endowments. The framework can readily be applied to more encompassing natural capital data, once it becomes available.
    August 25, 2016   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12247   open full text
  • Global Inequality: Relatively Lower, Absolutely Higher.
    Miguel Niño‐Zarazúa, Laurence Roope, Finn Tarp.
    Review of Income and Wealth. August 15, 2016
    This paper measures trends in global interpersonal inequality during 1975–2010 using data from the most recent version of the World Income Inequality Database (WIID). The picture that emerges using ‘absolute,’ and even ‘centrist’ measures of inequality, is very different from the results obtained using standard ‘relative’ inequality measures such as the Gini coefficient or Coefficient of Variation. Relative global inequality has declined substantially over the decades. In contrast, ‘absolute’ inequality, as captured by the Standard Deviation and Absolute Gini, has increased considerably and unabated. Like these ‘absolute’ measures, our ‘centrist’ inequality indicators, the Krtscha measure and an intermediate Gini, also register a pronounced increase in global inequality, albeit, in the case of the latter, with a decline during 2005 to 2010. A critical question posed by our findings is whether increased levels of inequality according to absolute and centrist measures are inevitable at today's per capita income levels. Our analysis suggests that it is not possible for absolute inequality to return to 1975 levels without further convergence in mean incomes among countries. Inequality, as captured by centrist measures such as the Krtscha, could return to 1975 levels, at today's domestic and global per capita income levels, but this would require quite dramatic structural reforms to reduce domestic inequality levels in most countries.
    August 15, 2016   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12240   open full text
  • Effects of Financial Crises on Productivity, Capital and Employment.
    Nicholas Oulton, María Sebastiá‐Barriel.
    Review of Income and Wealth. August 12, 2016
    We examine the hypothesis that capacity can be permanently damaged by financial, particularly banking, crises. A model which allows a financial crisis to have both a short‐run effect on the growth rate of labor productivity and a long‐run effect on its level is estimated on 61 countries over 1954–2010. A banking crisis as defined by Reinhart and Rogoff reduces the long‐run level of GDP per worker, and also that of capital per worker, by on average 1.1 percent, for each year that the crisis lasts; it also reduces the TFP level by 0.8%. The long run, negative effect on the level of GDP per capita, 1.8 percent, is substantially larger. So there is also a hit to employment. The effects on labor productivity, capital and TFP are larger in developing than in developed countries; the opposite is the case for employment.
    August 12, 2016   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12253   open full text
  • Real GDI, Productivity, and the Terms of Trade in Canada.
    Shutao Cao, Sharon Kozicki.
    Review of Income and Wealth. August 12, 2016
    In this paper, a quarterly dataset of productivity is built for the Canadian business sector, and the Diewert and Yu () estimates of annual productivity growth are revised and updated to reflect changes in the new Canadian system of national economic accounts. The quarterly data are then used to study the contribution of total factor productivity and the terms of trade to growth of real gross domestic income. In most years of the 2000s, the contribution of the terms of trade became significant in real income growth, whereas that of total factor productivity growth was stagnant. Improvement in the terms of trade arises froma decline in the import price index and an increase in the export price index.
    August 12, 2016   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12255   open full text
  • Earnings Growth and Movements in Self‐Reported Health.
    Timothy J. Halliday.
    Review of Income and Wealth. August 11, 2016
    We employ data from the Panel Study of Income Dynamics to investigate income to health causality. To account for unobserved heterogeneity, we focus on the relationship between earnings growth and changes in self‐reported health status. Causal claims are predicated upon appropriate moment restrictions and specification tests of their validity. We find evidence of causality running from income to health for married women and men. In addition, spousal income appears to be protective for married women.
    August 11, 2016   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12242   open full text
  • The Long Run Effects of Taxes and Tax Competition on top Income Shares: An Empirical Investigation.
    Christian Frey, Christoph Gorgas, Christoph A. Schaltegger.
    Review of Income and Wealth. August 05, 2016
    This paper provides empirical evidence on the long run effects of tax policy on income concentration in Switzerland. As Swiss cantons enjoy considerable autonomy with respect to income taxation, it is possible to study the impact of the cantonal income tax burden, as well as the influence of tax competition, on cantonal top income shares. Using panel regressions covering all Swiss cantons from 1917 to 2009 we find the expected negative effect of the tax burden on the cantonal top income share. Further, we find evidence that tax competition is a driving force behind the income shares of the top 1, 0.5 and 0.1 percent. Lower tax rates in neighbor cantons induce competitive pressure and ceteris paribus reduce top income shares in a canton. For the very top incomes tax competition seems to be an issue of the last 30 years.
    August 05, 2016   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12228   open full text
  • Upstream Product Market Regulations, ICT, R&D and Productivity.
    Gilbert Cette, Jimmy Lopez, Jacques Mairesse.
    Review of Income and Wealth. August 04, 2016
    Our study investigates the importance of two main channels through which upstream anti‐competitive sector regulations impact productivity growth: investments in R&D and in ICT, as opposed to alternative channels we cannot explicitly consider for lack of appropriate data such as improvements in skills, management and organization. We specify a three equations model: an extended production function relating total factor productivity to both R&D and ICT capital, and to upstream regulations, and two factor demand functions relating R&D and ICT capital to upstream regulations. We estimate these relations on an unbalanced panel of 15 OECD countries and 13 industries over the period 1987–2007. We find that the total impact of upstream regulations on total factor productivity is sizeable, a large part of which is transmitted through investments in R&D and ICT, mainly the former.
    August 04, 2016   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12252   open full text
  • Off‐Shoring, Specialization and R&D.
    Ioannis Bournakis, Michela Vecchi, Francesco Venturini.
    Review of Income and Wealth. July 27, 2016
    This paper investigates whether off‐shoring promotes technological specialization by reallocating resources towards high‐tech industries and/or stimulating within industry R&D. Using data for the USA, Japan and Europe, our results show that material off‐shoring promotes high‐tech specialization through input reallocation between sectors, while service off‐shoring favors technologically advanced production by increasing within‐industry productivity, mainly via its positive impact on R&D. Conversely, we find that the increasing fragmentation of core production tasks, captured by narrow off‐shoring, has adverse effects on technological specialisation, which suggests that this type of off‐shoring is mainly pursued for cost‐reduction motives.
    July 27, 2016   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12239   open full text
  • Welfare Dynamics Measurement: Two Definitions of a Vulnerability Line and Their Empirical Application.
    Hai‐Anh H. Dang, Peter F. Lanjouw.
    Review of Income and Wealth. July 25, 2016
    We propose a new approach to develop vulnerability lines that are explicitly anchored to the idea of a sub‐set of the population at risk of falling into poverty. We suggest that lines developed in this way can also be applied for the purpose of identifying the middle class (or “secure”). We illustrate that such vulnerability lines can be straightforwardly estimated with panel data, drawing on data from the USA and Vietnam. Importantly, given the relative scarcity of panel datasets, we show further that our method can be applied to synthetic panel datasets. We demonstrate this by means of an illustration using repeated cross‐section data from India. Our results indicate that in Vietnam and India during the 2000s, the population shares that can be designated as poor and as secure have, respectively, been falling and expanding, with the vulnerable share of the population remaining fairly stable. Sharply contrasting trends are seen in the USA.
    July 25, 2016   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12237   open full text
  • Productivity Growth and International Competitiveness.
    Wulong Gu, Beiling Yan.
    Review of Income and Wealth. July 25, 2016
    This paper presents a measure of effective multifactor productivity (MFP) growth for Canada, the U.S., Australia, Japan and selected EU countries. The measure differs from the standard MFP growth as it measures productivity growth in the production of different types of products instead of by industry and it captures the effect of productivity gains in both foreign and domestic upstream industries. The paper finds that the increase in effective MFP is closely associated with the decline in output price and improvement in international competitiveness. Multifactor productivity growth for small, open economies and for the production of manufacturing, investment and export goods is partly attributable to productivity gains in the production of intermediate inputs in foreign countries.
    July 25, 2016   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12254   open full text
  • Measuring Output, Input and Total Factor Productivity in Australian Agriculture: An Industry‐Level Analysis.
    Yu Sheng, Tom Jackson, Shiji Zhao, Dandan Zhang.
    Review of Income and Wealth. July 25, 2016
    This paper uses the growth accounting approach to estimate total factor productivity in the Australian agriculture industry between 1949 and 2012. To shed light on an unresolved debate on quantifying the roles of capital and labor, we compare the “ex‐ante” and “ex‐post” approaches to the estimation of returns to capital and labor, and find the former performs better than the latter in the context of the agricultural production account. We also demonstrate how the measurement of agricultural productivity may be improved by accounting for heterogeneity in output and input quality. Finally, our estimates are distinct from existing statistics in both the time length and industry coverage and provide new information about the long‐term trend of agriculture productivity in Australia.
    July 25, 2016   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12250   open full text
  • Growth in Earnings and Health: Nothing is as Practical as a Good Theory.
    Daniel Avdic, Martin Karlsson.
    Review of Income and Wealth. July 11, 2016
    We discuss some issues associated with the empirical analysis of the relationship between socioeconomic status and health. We point out that, in addition to elaborate empirical modeling and good data, a conceptual framework is helpful both for making sense of one's own results and for the purpose of reconciling results across studies. We find that when we align the empirical specification with the Grossman model, a negative effect of income on health emerges. Even though this unexpected finding can be rationalized, we think that some caution regarding standard dynamic panel data techniques is warranted in this context.
    July 11, 2016   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12243   open full text
  • Shifting Taxes from Labor to Consumption: More Employment and more Inequality?
    Nico Pestel, Eric Sommer.
    Review of Income and Wealth. July 07, 2016
    This paper investigates the effect of shifting taxes from labor income to consumption on labor supply and the distribution of income in Germany. We simulate stepwise increases in the value‐added tax (VAT) rate, which are compensated by revenue‐neutral reductions in income‐related taxes. We differentiate between the personal income tax (PIT) and social security contributions (SSC). Based on a dual data base and a microsimulation model of household labor supply behavior, we find a regressive impact of such a tax shift in the short run. When accounting for labor supply adjustments, the adverse distributional impact persists for PIT reductions, while the overall effects on inequality and progressivity become lower when payroll taxes are reduced. This is partly due to increases in aggregate labor supply, resulting from higher work incentives.
    July 07, 2016   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12232   open full text
  • Construction of a Consumption Aggregate Based on Information from POF 2008‐2009 and Its Use in the Measurement of Welfare, Poverty, Inequality and Vulnerability of Families.
    Leonardo S. Oliveira, Debora F. De Souza, Luciana A. Dos Santos, Marta Antunes, Nícia C. H. Brendolin, Viviane C. C. Quintaes.
    Review of Income and Wealth. July 01, 2016
    Given the complexity of family and individual welfare, this study aims to explain the construction of a family consumption aggregate, using data from Brazilian Family Expenditure Survey (2008–2009), and also to measure and analyze welfare, poverty, inequality and vulnerability. Following the literature, some aspects were considered: the selection of expenditures, the analysis of extreme values, the imputation of food consumption, the user cost of durable goods and a spatial price deflator. After the definition of the family consumption aggregate, we analyzed the Generalized Lorenz Curves, social welfare functions and inequality measures. Then we presented the sensitivity of the identification exercise to different poverty lines and analyzed the severity of poverty. Finally, based on Chaudhuri et al. (2002) and Elbers et al. (2002), the vulnerability to poverty was studied taking account of area (clusters) effects. In this last exercise, the poverty line was based on half the minimum wage in 2008.
    July 01, 2016   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12234   open full text
  • Comparative Research with Net and Gross Income Data: An Evaluation of Two Netting Down Procedures for the LIS Database.
    Rense Nieuwenhuis, Teresa Munzi, Janet C. Gornick.
    Review of Income and Wealth. June 14, 2016
    Researchers seeking to perform country‐comparative and trend analyses using income data have to account for the fact that income surveys differ in whether income is measured gross or net of taxes and contributions. We discuss, develop, and evaluate two ‘netting down procedures’ for data in the LIS Database. Evaluations of these netting down procedures indicate that comparisons across gross and net datasets can be greatly improved when netting down procedures are applied. In several cases, however, substantial amounts of bias remain.
    June 14, 2016   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12233   open full text
  • Decomposing Global Inequality.
    Jørgen Modalsli.
    Review of Income and Wealth. May 20, 2016
    This paper provides an intuitive additive decomposition of the global income Gini coefficient with respect to differences within and between countries. In 2005, nearly half the total global income inequality is due to income differences between Europeans and North Americans on the one side and inhabitants of Asia on the other, with the China‐USA income differences alone accounting for six percent of global inequality. Historically, income differences between Asia and Europe have driven a large part of global inequality, but the quantitative importance of within‐Asia income inequality has increased substantially since 1950.
    May 20, 2016   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12230   open full text
  • Income Inequality in Latin America: A Factor Component Analysis.
    Verónica Amarante.
    Review of Income and Wealth. May 20, 2016
    The decline in inequality observed in most Latin American countries after 2002 was surprisingly good news, particularly given that most developed countries were experiencing a rise in inequality at that time. Various arguments have been put forward to explain this decline, but there is still no consensus on the most plausible explanation. This article contributes to the ongoing discussion by performing inequality decompositions by factor components. We estimate the importance of each source of income in explaining the observed decline in income inequality between 2002 and 2011 in five Latin American countries. Specifically, we explore the role of the process of formalization that has taken place in regional labor markets, separating formal and informal wages and considering self‐employment incomes. In the five countries studied here informal wages and self‐employment income contributed to decreasing inequality. Formal sector wages, on the other hand, fostered inequality in all countries except Bolivia.
    May 20, 2016   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12236   open full text
  • The ‘Troubling Tradeoffs’ Paradox and a Resolution.
    Eduardo Zambrano.
    Review of Income and Wealth. May 20, 2016
    Ravallion () argues that the Human Development Index (HDI) embeds questionable tradeoffs between the dimensions used to compute the index. To alleviate these problems he proposes the adoption of one of the indices developed by Chakravarty (). In this paper I identify the following paradox: while the Chakravarty indices clearly exhibit more sensible tradeoffs than the HDI, the HDI produces more sensible rankings than the Chakravarty indices. To solve the paradox I identify the axioms behind each methodology responsible for the unintuitive tradeoffs and rankings and illustrate how to develop an index with these questionable axioms removed. This approach can result in methodologies that exhibit more intuitive tradeoffs by design, as it seeks inputs from the public as to what those tradeoffs ought to be, and produces rankings that are more in line with what the HDI wishes to measure: human development and capabilities, as conceptualized by Sen ().
    May 20, 2016   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12235   open full text
  • Alternative Approaches to Commercial Property Price Indexes for Tokyo.
    Erwin Diewert, Chihiro Shimizu.
    Review of Income and Wealth. May 02, 2016
    The paper studies the problems associated with the construction of price indexes for commercial properties that could be used in the System of National Accounts. Property price indexes are required for the stocks of commercial properties in the balance sheets and related price indexes for the land and structure components of a commercial property are required in the balance sheet accounts for the calculation of the Multifactor Productivity of the Commercial Property Industry. The paper uses a variant of the builder's model that has been used to construct Residential Property Price Indexes. Geometric depreciation rates are estimated for commercial offices in Tokyo using assessment data for REIT. The problems associated with the decomposition of property value into land and structure components are addressed. The problems associated with depreciating capital expenditures on buildings and with measuring the loss of asset value due to early retirement of the structure are also addressed.
    May 02, 2016   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12229   open full text
  • Accounting for China's Saving‐Investment Imbalance from 2002–2008.
    Jianwei Xu, Panpan Yang, Guangrong Ma.
    Review of Income and Wealth. February 24, 2016
    This paper decomposes and analyzes China's saving‐investment imbalance (equivalent to current account imbalance) from 2002–2008. We first use the Flow of Funds Accounts to calculate the saving and investment rates (propensity) of the household, corporate and government sectors and to evaluate their relative contribution to the aggregate saving‐investment surplus. The results indicate that the increase of saving‐investment surplus can be attributed to the steady increase of saving by the household and government sectors and the short‐term downsizing of investment by the corporate and government sectors. We then use more disaggregate supplementary datasets to explore the factors behind the evolution of the saving and investment rates for the three sectors. The rise of the household saving rate mainly sources from the urban sector. The corporate saving rate experienced a steady increase because of the rise of profitability. Government macroeconomic policies have had a strong influence on the saving and investment patterns of the corporate and government sectors.
    February 24, 2016   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12226   open full text
  • Consumer Expectations: A Residual Based Approach.
    Fahd Rehman, Russel J. Cooper.
    Review of Income and Wealth. February 05, 2016
    This paper presents an economy‐wide consumer expectations indicator that reflects different degrees of optimism or pessimism with respect to consumers’ confidence in their economy. The indicator provides a useful complement to traditional economic indicators that are frequently used to compare countries, such as gross domestic product (GDP) in purchasing power parity (PPP) terms. Our indicator may be seen as representing the influence of social wealth on economic behavior–that is, of effects left out of a standard economic analysis. We use a theoretical approach to integrate the expectations measure with the International Comparison Program's (ICP) PPP GDP statistics which produces a measure we term “effective GDP.” Compared to the ICP's PPP figures, the measure of “effective GDP” differs from the ICP's PPP estimates by as much as four to five percent in the positive direction for apparently optimistic countries and as much as two percent downwards for pessimists.
    February 05, 2016   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12227   open full text
  • Local Segregation and Well‐Being.
    Olga Alonso‐Villar, Coral Del Río.
    Review of Income and Wealth. January 07, 2016
    This paper deals with the quantification of the well‐being loss/gain of a demographic group associated with its occupational segregation, an issue that has not been formally tackled in the literature. For this purpose, this paper proposes several properties to take into account when measuring this phenomenon. Building on standard assumptions of social welfare functions, it also defines and characterizes a parameterized family of indices that satisfy those properties. In particular, the indices are equal to zero when either the group has no segregation or all occupations have the same wage, and the indices increase when individuals of the group move into occupations that have higher wages than those left behind. In addition, ceteris paribus, the indices increase more the lower the wage is of the occupation left behind, and consider small improvements for many people to be more important than large improvements for a few.
    January 07, 2016   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12224   open full text
  • Has Greater Stock Market Participation Increased Wealth Inequality in the Us?
    Yannis Bilias, Dimitris Georgarakos, Michael Haliassos.
    Review of Income and Wealth. January 07, 2016
    Is wider access to stockholding opportunities related to reduced wealth inequality, given that it creates challenges for small and less sophisticated investors? Counterfactual analysis is used to study the influence of changes in the U.S. stockholder pool and economic environment, on the distribution of stock and net household wealth during a period of dramatic increase in stock market participation. We uncover substantial shifts in stockholder pool composition, favoring smaller holdings during the 1990s upswing but larger holdings around the burst of the Internet bubble. We find no evidence that widening access to stocks was associated with reduced net wealth inequality.
    January 07, 2016   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12225   open full text
  • Can Minimum Wages Close the Gender Wage Gap?
    Mary Hallward‐Driemeier, Bob Rijkers, Andrew Waxman.
    Review of Income and Wealth. November 18, 2015
    Using manufacturing plant‐level census data, this paper demonstrates that minimum wage increases in Indonesia reduced gender wage gaps among production workers, with heterogeneous impacts by level of education and position of the firm in the wage distribution. Paradoxically, educated women appear to have benefitted the most, particularly in the lower half of the firm average earnings distribution. By contrast, women who did not complete primary education did not benefit on average, and even lost ground in the upper end of the earnings distribution. Minimum wage increases were thus associated with exacerbated gender pay gaps among the least educated, and reduced gender gaps among the best educated production workers. Unconditional quantile regression analysis attests to wage compression and lighthouse effects. Changes in relative employment prospects were limited.
    November 18, 2015   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12219   open full text
  • When More Does Not Necessarily Mean Better: Health‐Related Illfare Comparisons with Non‐Monotone Well‐Being Relationships.
    Mauricio Apablaza, Florent Bresson, Gaston Yalonetzky.
    Review of Income and Wealth. November 18, 2015
    Most welfare studies assume that well‐being is monotonically related to the variables used for the analysis. While this assumption is reasonable for many dimensions of well‐being like income, education, or empowerment, there are some cases where it is definitively not relevant, in particular with respect to health. For instance, health status is often proxied using the Body Mass Index (BMI). Low BMI values can capture undernutrition or the incidence of severe illness, yet a high BMI is neither desirable as it indicates obesity. Usual illfare indices derived from poverty measurement are then not appropriate. This paper proposes illfare indices that are consistent with some situations of non‐monotonic well‐being relationships and examines the partial orderings of different distributions derived from various classes of illfare indices. An illustration is provided for child health as proxied by a weight‐for‐age indicator using DHS data for Bangladesh, Colombia and Egypt during the last few decades.
    November 18, 2015   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12221   open full text
  • The Distribution Dynamics of Human Development in Mexico 1990–2010.
    Carlos Villalobos Barría, Stephan Klasen, Sebastian Vollmer.
    Review of Income and Wealth. October 14, 2015
    Based on census data linked to household surveys, we analyze the univariate and joint distribution of income, health and education at the municipality level in Mexico from 1990 to 2010 using Gaussian mixture models. The univariate analysis finds an emergence of a low‐income cluster in 2000, which disappears again by 2010. Our trivariate estimation shows an education‐led human development convergence over time while dynamics are mainly affected by fluctuations in health and income. Changes in development clusters have a clear spatial pattern and are closely related to the relative size of the agricultural sector and the proportion of indigenous population groups.
    October 14, 2015   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12220   open full text
  • The Sins of the Fathers: Intergenerational Income Mobility in China.
    Weici Yuan.
    Review of Income and Wealth. October 14, 2015
    This paper aims to obtain an accurate estimate of China's intergenerational income mobility and to present evidence on its distributional pattern. Using panel data from the China Health and Nutrition Survey (CHNS) over the period 1989–2009, I find that China is less mobile than most developed countries. Then, I employ five different approaches to investigate the distributional pattern of China's intergenerational mobility across income levels. The results suggest that poor families have relatively high mobility, indicating opportunities for the poor children to escape poverty. Finally, I show that while wealthy fathers are likely to pass on their favorable economic status to their sons, rich sons come from a very wide range of family economic backgrounds.
    October 14, 2015   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12222   open full text
  • Mobility in China.
    Yi Chen, Frank A. Cowell.
    Review of Income and Wealth. September 21, 2015
    The evidence on rank and income mobility in China reveals an important change around the year 2000. Using panel data from the China Health and Nutrition Survey we show that rank mobility fell markedly from the decade immediately preceding the millennium to the decade immediately following: in this respect China is becoming noticeably more rigid. By contrast income mobility has carried on increasing; so has income inequality. The simultaneous increase in rigidity and inequality presents China with a challenging policy problem.
    September 21, 2015   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12214   open full text
  • Measuring and Accounting for the Deprivation Gap of Portuguese Immigrants in Luxembourg.
    Vincent A. Hildebrand, María Noel Pi Alperin, Philippe Van Kerm.
    Review of Income and Wealth. August 26, 2015
    This paper examines the relative well‐being of Portuguese immigrants in Luxembourg by looking at indicators of material deprivation. We document material deprivation differences between immigrants and nationals—the “deprivation gap”—and measure the extent to which income differentials (and other sociodemographic differences) explain this gap using a combination of non‐parametric methods and a versatile graphical device. We find a large and significant deprivation gap against Portuguese immigrants, whatever the indicator considered. The extent to which the gap is merely a reflection of differences in income, however, depends on what deprivation items are taken into consideration. Income differences almost fully account for material deprivation differences when the latter is measured using the items included in the official EU social indicator of material deprivation. Inclusion of housing condition indicators mitigates this relationship and we then find compelling evidence that the deprivation gap is not entirely accounted for by income differentials.
    August 26, 2015   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12210   open full text
  • Do Savings and Credit Institutions Reduce Vulnerability? New Evidence From Mexico.
    Robert Lensink, Roselia Servin, Marrit Berg.
    Review of Income and Wealth. August 26, 2015
    This study examines whether membership in a savings and credit society (SACP) reduces vulnerability to poverty, using a representative survey from the National Savings and Financial Services Bank. The sample of households includes those that are and are not members of a SACP during 2004−2007. This evidence indicates that membership improves income; furthermore, membership decreases the variance in annual household per capita income. Both effects reduce the probability that somebody becomes poor. Finally, the results offer support for the proposition that households that join a SACP have better abilities to smooth consumption in the face of adverse shocks, and thus are less susceptible to shocks, than do households that are not members.
    August 26, 2015   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12213   open full text
  • When the Centre Cannot Hold: Patterns of Polarization in Nigeria.
    F. Clementi, A. L. Dabalen, V. Molini, F. Schettino.
    Review of Income and Wealth. August 18, 2015
    This paper advances the hypothesis that Nigeria is going through a process of economic polarization. The notion of polarization is concerned with the disappearance or non‐consolidation of the middle class, which occurs when there is a tendency to concentrate in the tails, rather than the middle, of the income/consumption distribution. This paper uses newly available data and the relative distribution methodology (Handcock and Morris, 1998, 1999) to present new results on polarization. The findings confirm the sharp increase of polarization. Compared to 2003, the distribution of consumption has become more concentrated in upper and lower deciles in 2013, while the middle deciles have thinned. A between‐group analysis shows the emergence of a macro‐regional gap: while the South‐South and South‐West regions contribute mainly to polarization in the upper tail, households in the North East and North West zones—the conflict‐stricken areas—are more likely to fall in the lower national deciles.
    August 18, 2015   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12212   open full text
  • Household Satellite Account for France.
    Aurélien Poissonnier, Delphine Roy.
    Review of Income and Wealth. August 18, 2015
    We estimate in a household satellite account (HHSA) the value of French domestic production in 2010 and 1998, using the input method and following Eurostat's recommendations. In line with previous studies, we find that extending the system of national accounts (SNA) frontier of production to domestic activities (house chores, cooking, care …) has a sizeable effect on key macroeconomic indicators (+33 percent GDP, −5 p.p. GDP growth, +50 percent disposable income, +58 percent consumption, and −10 p.p. of purchasing power growth). We conduct a sensitivity analysis to various methodological issues which have not yet been settled by an international benchmark. Quantitatively, the two most important issues are the boundary of household production—we favor a relatively narrow definition—and the use of a gross or a net wage—we prefer gross wage‐. However, estimates are much less sensitive to otherwise greatly debated issues such as which substitute wage to use.
    August 18, 2015   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12216   open full text
  • Building and Interpreting Macro/Micro Estimates of Accrued‐to‐Date Pension Liabilities: French Reforms as a Case Study.
    Didier Blanchet, Sylvie Le Minez, Anthony Marino.
    Review of Income and Wealth. July 01, 2015
    Estimates of accrued‐to‐date pension liabilities (ADL) should become more widely accessible to statisticians and decision makers in the near future, in application of new SNA requirements. This raises two questions: how can such estimates be routinely produced, and what for? Microsimulation helps in answering the first question of the “how.” It allows ADL computations that take into account the complexity of pension rules. Concerning the “what for” question, it is known that ADL are not an indicator of global financial sustainability. Messages they convey are more interesting at the micro level, from a household perspective. This fosters the case for microsimulation which spontaneously generates consistent micro/macro results. We illustrate these points using the French situation as a case study. We emphasize one aspect of French reforms that may concern other countries as well: the move to price indexation and the connection it creates between sustainability and growth assumptions.
    July 01, 2015   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12207   open full text
  • Which Gender Wage Gap Estimates to Trust? A Comparative Analysis.
    Karolina Goraus, Joanna Tyrowicz, Lucas Velde.
    Review of Income and Wealth. July 01, 2015
    The aim of this paper is to compare estimates of the adjusted wage gap from different methods and sets of conditioning variables. We apply available parametric and non‐parametric methods to LFS data from Poland for 2012. While the raw gap amounts to nearly 10 percent of the female wage; the adjusted wage gap estimates range between 15 percent and as much as 23 percent depending on the method and the choice of conditional variables. The differences across conditioning variables within the same method do not exceed 3pp, but including more variables almost universally results in larger estimates of the adjusted wage gaps. Methods that account for common support and selection into employment yielded higher estimates of the adjusted wage gap. While the actual point estimates of adjusted wage gap are slightly different, all of them are roughly twice as high as the raw gap, which corroborates the policy relevance of this methodological study.
    July 01, 2015   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12209   open full text
  • Deleveraging in a Highly Indebted Property Market: Who does it and are there Implications for Household Consumption?
    Yvonne McCarthy, Kieran McQuinn.
    Review of Income and Wealth. July 01, 2015
    A distinguishing feature of the period preceding the 2007/2008 financial crisis was the sizeable increase in private sector debt observed across many countries. A key component of household liabilities is mortgage debt and with many countries experiencing persistent increases in house prices from the mid‐1990s, a marked increase in this aspect of household leverage was observed. While aggregate statistics across countries confirm reductions in personal debt levels in recent years, relatively few sources of micro data are available to examine the nature of the deleveraging process at the household level. In this paper, using a unique dataset, we examine deleveraging amongst a representative sample of mortgaged Irish households. We identify the characteristics of households engaged in deleveraging and find that it is those households who can afford to deleverage who do. Furthermore we find some tentative evidence to suggest that the decision to deleverage has negative implications for household consumption.
    July 01, 2015   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12208   open full text
  • Comparing the Incidence of Taxes and Social Spending in Brazil and the United States.
    Sean Higgins, Nora Lustig, Whitney Ruble, Timothy M. Smeeding.
    Review of Income and Wealth. May 24, 2015
    We perform the first comprehensive fiscal incidence analyses in Brazil and the U.S., including direct cash and food transfers, targeted housing and heating subsidies, public spending on health and education, and taxes on personal income, payroll, corporate income, property, and expenditures. The countries share a number of similarities that make the comparison interesting, including high levels of inequality given their levels of development, high inequality of opportunity, large and racially diverse populations, and similar sizes of government. The U.S. achieves higher redistribution through direct taxes and transfers, primarily because Brazil underutilizes personal income taxes and keeps its progressive cash and food transfer programs small, while its larger transfer programs are less progressive. When public spending on health and non‐tertiary education is added to income using the government cost approach, however, the two countries achieve similar levels of redistribution.
    May 24, 2015   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12201   open full text
  • Household Income, Demand, and Saving: Deriving Macro Data With Micro Data Concepts.
    Barry Z. Cynamon, Steven M. Fazzari.
    Review of Income and Wealth. May 15, 2015
    We develop adjustments to align the NIPA measures of key household variables with cash flow concepts that reflect household budgets and actual demand generated by households. The adjusted variables have substantially different behaviors across time than NIPA measures of household spending and saving. Furthermore, household income aggregated from micro data sets like the CPS, SCF, and PSID differs significantly from NIPA personal income. But the micro survey data likely reflect cash flow concepts rather than NIPA definitions. Indeed the adjusted cash flow measure of income eliminates much of the gap between micro data income variables and NIPA household income.
    May 15, 2015   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12206   open full text
  • Measuring the Consistency of Cross‐Sectional and Longitudinal Income Information in EU‐SILC.
    Kristina Krell, Joachim R. Frick, Markus M. Grabka.
    Review of Income and Wealth. May 14, 2015
    The EU‐wide survey “Statistics on Income and Living Conditions” (EU‐SILC) is extremely important for international social science research and policy advice. It is therefore crucial to ensure that the data are of the highest quality and international comparability. This paper is aimed at identifying unexpected developments in income levels, income mobility, and inequality in the EU‐SILC data between 2005 and 2009. We examine the consistency of EU‐SILC by comparing cross‐sectional results with findings based on two‐year longitudinal samples. Although the data represent similar populations, for several countries the results of this comparison differ widely. One important outcome is the high degree of variability over time in countries that obtain their income information from register data. This suggests methodological challenges in the clear designation of new subsample members, in the reweighting of the data, in imputation of missing values, and in other areas.
    May 14, 2015   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12202   open full text
  • The Elasticity of Poverty with respect to Sectoral Growth in Africa.
    Nicoletta Berardi, Federica Marzo.
    Review of Income and Wealth. May 14, 2015
    The African continent has grown by more than 4 percent yearly on average during the past decade. However, the link between this remarkable growth rate and poverty reduction is neither obvious nor simple. This paper focuses on the elasticity of poverty with respect to GDP growth at the sectoral level and takes into account the fact that economic growth may affect poverty directly as well as indirectly through sectoral labor share intensity. It develops a methodology that sheds light on the contribution of sectoral growth to poverty reduction country‐by‐country in Africa, guiding policy recommendations. As the composition of growth matters at least as much as its overall intensity, it is key to identify the sectors that have the strongest impact on poverty reduction and unleash their potential; if growth happens to concentrate in sectors with scarce pro‐poor potential, like commodity‐driven growth, redistributive strategies are necessary to compensate the weak effect on poverty.
    May 14, 2015   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12203   open full text
  • Measurement and Allocation of Capital Inputs With Taxes: A Sensitivity Analysis for OECD Countries.
    Serena Fatica.
    Review of Income and Wealth. May 13, 2015
    Taxes affect the measurement of capital inputs. The paper provides an assessment of these impacts in a cross‐country framework where heterogeneity of corporate taxation across industries and asset types is accounted for. The results show that taxes change the relative prices of capital types, which, in turn, has implications on the estimated capital quality and reallocation effects in the traditional growth accounting framework. Omitting tax parameters is a source of mismeasurement, particularly when the rental price of capital assets is constructed using an external rate of return, leading to biased capital costs and profits rates. It is shown that differential taxation results in a deadweight loss in terms of misallocated capital inputs, predominantly due to composition effects within industries.
    May 13, 2015   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12199   open full text
  • Parental Wealth and the Black–White Mobility Gap in the U.S.
    Liana E. Fox.
    Review of Income and Wealth. May 07, 2015
    Utilizing longitudinal data from the Panel Study of Income Dynamics (PSID), this paper examines the relationship between parental wealth and intergenerational income mobility for black and white families. I find that total parental wealth is positively associated with upward mobility for low‐income white families, but is not associated with reduced likelihood of downward mobility for white families from the top half of the income distribution. Conversely, I find that total parental wealth does not have the same positive association for low‐income black families, while home ownership may have negative associations with the likelihood of upward mobility for these families. However, for black families from the top half of the income distribution, home equity is associated with a decreased likelihood of downward mobility, suggesting a heterogeneous relationship between home ownership and mobility for black families.
    May 07, 2015   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12200   open full text
  • Top Income Shares, Business Profits, and Effective Tax Rates in Contemporary Chile.
    Tasha Fairfield, Michel Jorratt De Luis.
    Review of Income and Wealth. April 10, 2015
    We contribute to research on inequality and world top incomes by presenting the first calculations of Chilean top income shares and effective tax rates using individual tax return microdata from 2005 and 2009. We pay special attention to business income, which dominates at the top. Our analysis includes not only distributed profits, but also the large proportion of accrued profits retained by firms, which are rarely analyzed given the difficulty of identifying individual owners. Our most conservative top 1 percent income‐share estimate is 15 percent—the fifth highest in the top incomes literature. When distributed profits are adjusted for evasion, the top 1 percent share reaches 22–26 percent. When we broaden the income concept to include accrued profits, which we impute to taxpayers using ownership shares calculated from business tax forms, the top 1 percent share increases to a minimum of 23 percent. Despite this impressive income concentration, the top 1 percent pays modest average effective income‐tax rates of 15–16 percent.
    April 10, 2015   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12196   open full text
  • What Stops Dutch Households from Taking Up Much Needed Benefits?
    Caren Tempelman, Aenneli Houkes‐Hommes.
    Review of Income and Wealth. April 10, 2015
    It is common for individuals not to take up welfare benefits. The most common explanation is that people make a rational choice between the utility they expect from the benefit and the effort required to take‐up. Most studies utilize surveys, which are subject to misreporting and measurement errors, to determine eligibility and non‐take‐up rates. This study uses a novel dataset based on administrative data sources, which provides a more accurate identification of eligible households and take‐up. Furthermore, this study documents non‐take‐up of a compensation to which nearly 5 million Dutch households are entitled. The richness of the data allowed us to conduct a detailed analysis of key drivers of non‐take‐up. The analysis largely confirms the transaction‐costs hypotheses. However, we found an unexpected effect. Although, in general, the probability of take‐up increases when income decreases, those with the lowest income or wealth do not have the highest probability of take‐up.
    April 10, 2015   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12197   open full text
  • Product‐Marketing Innovation, Skills, and Firm Productivity Growth.
    Martin Junge, Battista Severgnini, Anders Sørensen.
    Review of Income and Wealth. April 03, 2015
    The role of product and marketing innovation for productivity growth is addressed using survey and register data for the Danish economy. It is hypothesized that product and marketing innovation are complementary inputs and that innovation activities are skill‐intensive. It is established that product and marketing innovation in skill‐intensive firms results in significantly faster productivity growth. Moreover, product and marketing innovation have independent roles in productivity growth, which cannot be attributed to organizational changes. Finally, we apply an instrument variable approach for firms, innovation choices to study endogeneity. The results strongly support the idea that product–marketing innovation leads to faster productivity growth in skill‐intensive firms.
    April 03, 2015   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12192   open full text
  • Material Offshoring: Alternate Measures.
    John R. Baldwin, Wulong Gu, Aaron Sydor, Beiling Yan.
    Review of Income and Wealth. April 03, 2015
    Industry measures of offshoring of material inputs are often generated using the proportionality assumption applied to aggregate import data—that the import share of each commodity used in the production process for a particular industry is similar to the import share of a commodity for the total economy. This note compares estimates of offshoring for the Canadian manufacturing sector derived using this assumption to four alternatives: two measures that use direct measures of firm‐based imports, and two hybrid measures that use both input and import information. These indirect measures are compared to survey estimates that directly assess import intensity in the production process in an effort to evaluate which indirect method yields more reasonable offshoring measures.
    April 03, 2015   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12195   open full text
  • Measuring Achievement and Shortfall Improvements in a Consistent Way.
    Iñaki Permanyer.
    Review of Income and Wealth. April 03, 2015
    In measuring improvements over time of bounded variables, one can focus on achievements or shortfalls. However, rankings of alternative social states in terms of achievements and shortfalls do not necessarily mirror one another. We characterize axiomatically different families of achievement and shortfall improvement indices, and present the necessary and sufficient conditions under which they rank social states in a consistent way. Empirical illustrations using child mortality data from South Africa suggest that consistency between achievement and shortfall improvements in standards of living is not only a matter of theoretical import but is also a problem that can be encountered in practice to a large extent.
    April 03, 2015   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12194   open full text
  • Valuing Unpaid Child Care in the U.S.: A Prototype Satellite Account Using the American Time Use Survey.
    Jooyeoun Suh, Nancy Folbre.
    Review of Income and Wealth. March 31, 2015
    This paper builds on previous satellite accounts that treat households as production units, but challenges their measurement and valuation of time devoted to child care, making a case for the inclusion of supervisory child care time that does not overlap with other productive activities. We also suggest several other methodological refinements for estimates based on analysis of data from the American Time Use Survey: application of a vector of specialized replacement cost wage estimates for different child care activities rather than a single wage, and adjustments for the ratio of children to adults present and for the educational attainment of caregivers. Our estimates of the value of child care alone in 2004 and 2010 exceed previous estimates of the value of all non‐market household production in the U.S. The end result is an upward adjustment of Gross Domestic Product by about 43 percent compared to previous adjustments of about 26 percent.
    March 31, 2015   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12193   open full text
  • A New Look at Intergenerational Mobility in Germany Compared to the U.S.
    Daniel D. Schnitzlein.
    Review of Income and Wealth. March 25, 2015
    Motivated by contradictory evidence on intergenerational mobility in Germany, I present a cross‐country comparison of Germany and the U.S., reassessing the question of whether intergenerational mobility is higher in Germany than in the U.S. I can reproduce the standard result from the literature, which states that the German intergenerational elasticity estimates are lower than those for the U.S. However, based on highly comparable data, even a reasonable degree of variation in the sampling rules leads to similar estimates in both countries. I find no evidence for non‐linearities along the fathers' earnings distribution. In contrast, the analysis shows that mobility is higher for the sons at the lowest quartile of the sons' earnings distribution in both countries. In Germany this result is mainly driven by a high downward mobility of sons with fathers in the upper middle part of the earnings distribution. The corresponding pattern is clearly less pronounced in the U.S.
    March 25, 2015   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12191   open full text
  • Economic Growth Evens Out Happiness: Evidence from Six Surveys.
    Andrew E. Clark, Sarah Flèche, Claudia Senik.
    Review of Income and Wealth. March 11, 2015
    In spite of the great U‐turn that saw income inequality rise in Western countries in the 1980s, happiness inequality has fallen in countries that have experienced income growth (but not in those that did not). Modern growth has reduced the share of both the “very unhappy” and the “perfectly happy.” Lower happiness inequality is found both between and within countries, and between and within individuals. Our cross‐country regression results suggest that the extension of various public goods helps to explain this greater happiness homogeneity. This new stylized fact arguably comes as a bonus to the Easterlin paradox, offering a somewhat brighter perspective for developing countries.
    March 11, 2015   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12190   open full text
  • Income and Fiscal Incidence by Age and Gender: Some Evidence from New Zealand.
    Omar Aziz, Norman Gemmell, Athene Laws.
    Review of Income and Wealth. March 10, 2015
    With many fiscal policies likely to have quite different age/gender incidences, this paper examines age and gender dimensions of income distribution and fiscal incidence in New Zealand using Household Economic Survey data for 2010. Applying, and testing, an intra‐household income sharing rule, our evidence suggests strong life‐cycle and gender aspects to fiscal incidence. Net tax liabilities are found to be low and negative, at younger and older ages but positive during much of the “working age.” Notwithstanding considerable within‐gender heterogeneity, women are found on average to have systematically and persistently lower net fiscal liabilities than men, especially at older ages.
    March 10, 2015   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12165   open full text
  • Life Cycle Price Trends and Product Replacement: Implications for the Measurement of Inflation.
    Daniel Melser, Iqbal A. Syed.
    Review of Income and Wealth. March 10, 2015
    The paper explores the extent to which products follow systematic pricing patterns over their life cycle and the impact this has on the measurement of inflation. Using a large U.S. scanner data set on supermarket products and applying flexible regression methods, we find that on average prices decline as items age. This life cycle price change is often attributed to quality difference in the construction of CPI as items are replaced due to disappearance or during sample rotations. This introduces a systematic bias in the measurement of inflation. For our data we find that the life cycle bias leads to the underestimation of inflation by around 0.30 percentage points each year for the products examined.
    March 10, 2015   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12166   open full text
  • Consumption, Income, and Wealth: Evidence from Age, Cohort, and Period Elasticities.
    G. C. Lim, Q. Zeng.
    Review of Income and Wealth. March 10, 2015
    This paper examines the relationship between non‐durable consumption, income, and wealth (housing and financial) allowing explicitly for generational heterogeneity. A framework is proposed to disentangle cohort, age, and period effects and the empirical analysis is based on the U.S. Consumer Expenditure Survey data. We find that there are significant generational differences and the results highlight the range of elasticities implicit in results presented, thus far, by age groups. Moreover, we find supporting evidence of humped shaped age profiles for the elasticity of consumption with respect to income and the importance of financial wealth for those aged 60+. The framework also allows us to generate cohort profiles which draw attention to the negative role of housing wealth for generation X, and period profiles which reinforce the role of financial wealth for the baby‐boom generation.
    March 10, 2015   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12182   open full text
  • Productivity Trends in Advanced Countries between 1890 and 2012.
    Antonin Bergeaud, Gilbert Cette, Rémy Lecat.
    Review of Income and Wealth. March 10, 2015
    In order to examine productivity waves and convergence processes, we study productivity trends, trend breaks, and levels for 13 advanced countries between 1890 and 2012. We highlight two productivity waves, a big one following the second industrial revolution and a smaller one following the ICT revolution. The convergence process has been erratic, halted by inappropriate institutions, technology shocks, financial crises, and above all wars, which led to major productivity level leaps, downwards for countries experiencing war on their soil, and upwards for other countries. Productivity trend breaks have been identified following wars, global financial crises, global supply shocks, and major policy changes. The upward trend break for the U.S. in the mid‐1990s has been confirmed, as has the downward trend break for the euro area in the same period.
    March 10, 2015   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12185   open full text
  • Correcting for the Missing Rich: An Application to Wealth Survey Data.
    Paul Eckerstorfer, Johannes Halak, Jakob Kapeller, Bernhard Schütz, Florian Springholz, Rafael Wildauer.
    Review of Income and Wealth. March 10, 2015
    It is a well‐known criticism that if the distribution of wealth is highly concentrated, survey data are hardly reliable when it comes to analyzing the richest parts of society. This paper addresses this criticism by providing a general rationale of the underlying methodological problem as well as by proposing a specific methodological approach tailored to correcting the arising bias. We illustrate the latter approach by using Austrian data from the Household Finance and Consumption Survey. Specifically, we identify suitable parameter combinations by using a series of maximum‐likelihood estimates and appropriate goodness‐of‐fit tests to avoid arbitrariness with respect to the fitting of the Pareto distribution. Our results suggest that the alleged non‐observation bias is considerable, accounting for about one quarter of total net wealth in the case of Austria. The method developed in this paper can easily be applied to other countries where survey data on wealth are available.
    March 10, 2015   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12188   open full text
  • Is Financial Fragility a Matter of Illiquidity? An Appraisal for Italian Households.
    Marianna Brunetti, Elena Giarda, Costanza Torricelli.
    Review of Income and Wealth. March 10, 2015
    We investigate household financial fragility in Italy, providing three main contributions. First, we propose a novel characterization of financial fragility that is not necessarily linked to indebtedness, distinguishes between expected and unexpected expenses, takes portfolio composition into account, and is free of subjectivity bias. Second, we use it to assess the importance of household portfolio composition for determining the difficulties related to coping with unexpected expenditures, besides socio‐economic and demographic factors. Third, we test its ability to forecast future conditions of financial distress. The empirical analysis is based on the Bank of Italy Survey on Household Income and Wealth. The results highlight the relevance of portfolio choices as determinants of financial distress, that is, they provide evidence that homeownership increases the likelihood of financial fragility while the presence of a mortgage decreases it. Moreover our measure is shown to act as an early warning indicator of distress.
    March 10, 2015   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12189   open full text
  • Household Finances and Social Interaction: Bayesian Analysis of Household Panel Data.
    Sarah Brown, Pulak Ghosh, Karl Taylor.
    Review of Income and Wealth. February 11, 2015
    We investigate the relationship between social interaction and household finances using the British Household Panel Survey. We explore the relationship between a wide range of aspects of household finances and social interaction, rather than focusing on one particular facet of household finances, such as the holding of stocks and shares. We develop a Bayesian statistical framework to simultaneously explore both sides of the household balance sheet—liabilities and assets. Additionally, we allow the influence of social interaction on household finances to be time dependent, enabling us to model the effects of social interaction from a dynamic perspective. We also develop a two‐part model to jointly investigate the influence of social interaction on the amount of different types of debt and financial assets held conditional on holding the different types of debt and assets. Our analysis suggests that social interaction is associated with households holding larger amounts of debt and assets.
    February 11, 2015   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12174   open full text
  • Mobility of Top Incomes in Germany.
    Katharina Jenderny.
    Review of Income and Wealth. February 02, 2015
    I analyze German top income mobility using micro‐level panel data of personal income tax returns which are highly representative for top income taxpayers for the years 2001–06. Top income mobility is assessed in three dimensions: (i) persistence in top income fractiles and its stability over time, (ii) measures of individual mobility that are not dependent on the fractile size: the degree of mobility between equally sized groups and mobility in ranks, and (iii) mobility's impact on top income shares. Persistence in top income fractiles is comparatively high and fairly stable across the analyzed period. Top income recipients are less prone to downward mobility and see less variation in annual ranks than less rich tax units. Mobility's impact on income concentration is moderate. The top percentile's share is reduced by roughly 5 percent over six years.
    February 02, 2015   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12184   open full text
  • Ordinal Bivariate Inequality: Concepts and Application to Child Deprivation in Mozambique.
    Christoffer Sonne‐Schmidt, Finn Tarp, Lars Peter Østerdal.
    Review of Income and Wealth. January 26, 2015
    This paper introduces a concept of inequality comparisons with ordinal bivariate categorical data. In our model, one population is more unequal than another when they have common arithmetic median outcomes and the first can be obtained from the second by correlation‐increasing switches and/or median‐preserving spreads. For the canonical 2 × 2 case (with two binary indicators), we derive a simple operational procedure for checking ordinal inequality relations in practice. As an illustration, we apply the model to childhood deprivation in Mozambique.
    January 26, 2015   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12183   open full text
  • Top Wealth Shares in Australia 1915–2012.
    Pamela Katic, Andrew Leigh.
    Review of Income and Wealth. January 20, 2015
    Combining data from surveys, inheritance tax records, and rich lists, we estimate top wealth shares for Australia from World War I until the present day. We find that the top 1 percent share declined by two‐thirds from 1915 until the late 1960s, and rose from the late 1970s to 2010. The recent increase is sharpest at the top of the distribution, with the top 0.001 percent wealth share tripling from 1984 to 2012. The trend in top wealth shares is similar to that in Australian top income shares (though the drop in the first half of the twentieth century is larger for wealth than income shares). Since the early twentieth century, top wealth shares in Australia have been lower than in the U.K. and U.S.
    January 20, 2015   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12177   open full text
  • Race, Ethnicity, Immigration, and Living Conditions in Costa Rica.
    Carlos Gradín.
    Review of Income and Wealth. January 20, 2015
    Using information from the 2011 census, we analyze the differential in living standards by race, ethnicity, and country of birth in Costa Rica. We identify the main factors explaining such inequalities along the distribution of a composite index of wellbeing, with counterfactual analysis based on the Blinder–Oaxaca type of decomposition. Our results show that mulattoes, indigenous people, and immigrants from Nicaragua and Panama are generally worse off than the majority of the population, although the reasons differ. While lower education levels and lower paying occupations explain much of the differential in all cases, location is particularly important for indigenous people and immigrants from Panama who live in the least developed areas of the country. We also investigate the distributive pattern of these inequalities and the remarkably distinctive situation of Costa Rican blacks.
    January 20, 2015   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12176   open full text
  • Income Inequality and Political Polarization: Time Series Evidence Over Nine Decades.
    John V. Duca, Jason L. Saving.
    Review of Income and Wealth. January 08, 2015
    Rising income inequality and political polarization have led some to hypothesize that the two are causally linked. Properly interpreting such correlations is complicated by multiple factors driving these phenomena, potential feedback between inequality and polarization, measurement issues, and the statistical challenges of modeling non‐stationary variables. We find that a more precise measure of inequality (the inverted Pareto–Lorenz coefficient) is more consistently and statistically related to polarization in the short and long runs than the less precise top 1 percent share of income. We find bi‐directional causality between polarization and inequality, consistent with theoretical conjecture and less formal evidence in previous studies.
    January 08, 2015   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12162   open full text
  • Precautionary Savings in Mexico: Evidence From the Mexican Health and Aging Study.
    Durfari Velandia Naranjo, Edwin Gameren.
    Review of Income and Wealth. January 07, 2015
    Precautionary saving is the additional saving done by individuals to protect them financially in situations of uncertainty and reduce their vulnerability for negative shocks that may affect their consumption levels. This paper investigates the existence and extent of savings motivated by precaution in Mexico for people aged between 50 and 75, using data from the Mexican Health and Ageing Study 2003. The empirical strategy is based on a test of the direct relationship between the accumulated wealth and the uncertainty generated by the social security status, in particular the availability of health insurance, accounting also for the expectation to receive a retirement pension. The endogeneity‐corrected estimates do not yield results that unequivocally support the existence of private savings as a risk protection mechanism, implying that the public protection system has an important role in reducing the vulnerability of the population studied.
    January 07, 2015   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12164   open full text
  • Estimating Consumption Responses to Income Shocks of Different Persistence Using Self‐Reported Income Measures.
    Merike Kukk, Dmitry Kulikov, Karsten Staehr.
    Review of Income and Wealth. January 07, 2015
    Models of intertemporal consumption choice posit that consumption reacts more strongly to income shocks with persistent effects than to shocks with temporary effects. This prediction is tested using data from the Estonian Household Budget Surveys for 2002–07. Questions in the survey make it possible to distinguish between two income components of different persistence, using the individual households’ subjective income classification. Estimations confirm that households distinguish income components of different persistence and react to these differently; the consumption response to income shocks with persistent effects is significantly higher than the response to shocks with only temporary effects. Further analysis reveals, however, that consumption also reacts to lagged shocks to temporary income even when the households are not liquidity constrained, suggesting that their behavior is not fully consistent with the standard forward‐looking unconstrained consumption models.
    January 07, 2015   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12163   open full text
  • ICT and Growth: The Role of Rates of Return and Capital Prices.
    Thomas Niebel, Marianne Saam.
    Review of Income and Wealth. January 07, 2015
    We revisit the widely discussed contribution of investment in ICT to economic growth, focusing on differences in productivity and quality of ICT across countries and time. In a growth accounting approach, we look at the way rates of return and rates of asset price decline measure these aspects. Conducting a sensitivity analysis with data from the EU KLEMS database for the years 1990–2007, we introduce a constant rate of return and a constant rate of ICT price decline. Both alternative measurements somewhat downplay the role investment played relative to growth in multifactor productivity in the U.K. and the U.S. during 1995–2000. Moreover, we show that more than half of the ICT contribution to labor productivity growth results from changes in capital quality and composition rather than from quantity.
    January 07, 2015   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12168   open full text
  • Distributional Consequences of Commodity Price Shocks: Australia Over A Century.
    Sambit Bhattacharyya, Jeffrey G. Williamson.
    Review of Income and Wealth. January 07, 2015
    This paper studies the distributional impact of commodity price shocks over the short and the very long run. Using a GARCH model, we find that Australia experienced more volatility than many commodity exporting developing countries over the periods 1865–1940 and 1960–2008. We conduct cointegration tests to assess the commodity price shock inequality nexus. A single equation error correction model suggests that commodity price shocks increase the income share of the top 1, 0.05, and 0.01 percent in the short run. The very top end of the income distribution benefits from commodity booms disproportionately more than the rest of the society. The short run effect is mainly driven by wool and mining and not agricultural commodities. A sustained increase in the price of renewables (wool) reduces inequality whereas the same for non‐renewable resources (minerals) increases inequality. We expect that the initial distribution of land and mineral resources explains the asymmetric result.
    January 07, 2015   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12167   open full text
  • The Evolution of Gender and Racial Occupational Segregation Across Formal and Non‐Formal Labor Markets in Brazil, 1987 to 2006.
    Paola Salardi.
    Review of Income and Wealth. December 18, 2014
    This study provides a unique analysis of the evolution of gender and racial occupational segregation in Brazil covering the period from 1987 to 2006. Employing a newly harmonized occupational classification, it provides new insights into the nature and evolution of occupational segregation and on the forces driving these changes over this period of time. Three major findings emerge. First, gender segregation is always greater than racial segregation, but the latter has been more persistent over time. Second, segregation has declined mainly in the formal labor market. Third, this decline has been mainly driven by changes in gender and racial composition within occupations.
    December 18, 2014   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12159   open full text
  • Understanding Changes in the Distribution and Redistribution of Income: A Unifying Decomposition Framework.
    Nicolas Herault, Francisco Azpitarte.
    Review of Income and Wealth. December 12, 2014
    In recent decades income inequality has increased in many developed countries but the role of tax and transfer reforms is often poorly understood. We propose a new method allowing for the decomposition of historical changes in income distribution and redistribution measures into: (i) the immediate effect of tax‐transfer policy reforms in the absence of behavioral responses; (ii) the effect of labor supply responses induced by these reforms; and (iii) a third component allowing us to explore the effect of changes in the distribution of a wide range of determinants, including the effect of employment changes not induced by policy reforms. The application of the decomposition to Australia reveals that the direct effect of tax‐transfer policy reforms accounts for half of the observed increase in income inequality between 1999 and 2008, while the increased dispersion of wages and capital incomes also played an important role.
    December 12, 2014   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12160   open full text
  • Wage Assimilation of Foreigners: Which Factors Close the Gap? Evidence From Germany.
    Florian Lehmer, Johannes Ludsteck.
    Review of Income and Wealth. May 06, 2014
    This study analyzes the development of the wages of male foreign workers from all important sending countries across time using longitudinal employment register data. A cohort analysis of the individuals entering the German labor market in the years 1999 to 2001 indicates that the raw wage gap of migrants compared to native Germans decreases by 14 log percentage points in the first eight years. The results of a decomposition method based on fixed effects regression models give evidence that this wage adjustment is mostly due to time‐varying observable characteristics. Selective return migration, and the trend effects play no role for the aggregate. We find that wage assimilation happens mainly through three channels: first, through the accumulation of firm‐specific human capital, which explains approximately 40 percent; second, search gains are approximately the same order of magnitude; and third, the accumulation of general human capital explains one‐fifth of the assimilation. We further demonstrate that the importance of these channels differs substantially by the origin groups.
    May 06, 2014   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12124   open full text
  • Deprivation and the Dimensionality of Welfare: A Variable‐Selection Cluster‐Analysis Approach.
    Germán Caruso, Walter Sosa‐Escudero, Marcela Svarc.
    Review of Income and Wealth. May 06, 2014
    We approach the problems of measuring the dimensionality of welfare and that of identifying the multidimensionally poor, by first finding the poor using the original space of attributes, and then reducing the welfare space. The starting point is the notion that the “poor” constitutes a group of individuals that are essentially different from the “non‐poor” in a truly multidimensional framework. Once this group has been identified through a clustering procedure, we propose reducing the dimension of the original welfare space using recent blinding methods for variable selection. We implement our approach to the case of Latin America based on the Gallup World Poll, which contains ample information on many dimensions of welfare.
    May 06, 2014   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12127   open full text
  • The Hunger of Old Women in Rural Tanzania: Can Subjective Data Improve Poverty Measurement?
    Lars Osberg.
    Review of Income and Wealth. May 06, 2014
    On average, women in Tanzania are slightly less likely than men to say that they are “always/often without enough food to eat”—but this masks a much higher rate of self‐reported food deprivation among elderly rural women. Official Tanzanian poverty statistics are, however, based on a methodology which presumes equal sharing per equivalent adult within the household. This paper combines subjective and objective micro‐data from Tanzania's 2007 Household Budget Survey and 2007 Views of the People Survey. By imputing individual consumption based on the relative probability of self‐reported food deprivation, it provides an example of the possible importance of one type of intra‐household inequality—i.e., the hunger of old women—for poverty measurement. Implications include the complexity of gendered intra‐household inequality and the importance of “technical” poverty measurement choices for public policy priorities, such as old age pensions.
    May 06, 2014   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12128   open full text
  • Time And Income Poverty: An Interdependent Multidimensional Poverty Approach With German Time Use Diary Data.
    Joachim Merz, Tim Rathjen.
    Review of Income and Wealth. April 23, 2014
    This study contributes to the multidimensional poverty discussion in two ways. First, we argue for and consider time—in particular genuine personal leisure time—as an important and prominent resource, additional to income, for everyday activities and individual well‐being. Second, we evaluate and quantify the interdependence among the multiple poverty dimensions (via a CES well‐being function and SOEP data) of the German population instead of arbitrarily choosing substitution parameters. We characterize the working poor and their multidimensional poverty regimes by descriptive results and by multinomial logit estimation based on German 2001/02 time use diary data. We find that the interdependence between time and income is significant. There is an important fraction of time poor individuals who are assigned not to compensate their time deficit even by above poverty threshold income. These poor people in particular have so far been ignored in the literature on poverty and well‐being as well as the time pressure/time crunch.
    April 23, 2014   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12117   open full text
  • U.S. Pensions in the 2000s: The Lost Decade?
    Edward N. Wolff.
    Review of Income and Wealth. April 10, 2014
    The last three decades saw a sharp decline in traditional defined benefit (DB) pensions and a corresponding rise in defined contribution (DC) plans. Using the Survey of Consumer Finances from 1983 to 2010, I find that after robust gains in the 1980s and 1990s, pension wealth experienced a marked slowdown in growth from 2001 to 2007 and then fell in absolute terms from 2007 to 2010. Median augmented wealth (the sum of net worth, pensions, and Social Security wealth) advanced slower than median net worth from 1983 to 2007 and its inequality rose more, as DB wealth fell off. However, from 2007 to 2010, the opposite occurred. While median wealth plummeted by 41 percent and inequality spiked by 0.032 Gini points, median augmented wealth fell by only 21 percent and its Gini coefficient rose by only 0.009 points. The differences are due to the moderating influence of Social Security wealth.
    April 10, 2014   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12123   open full text
  • Has Switzerland Really Been Marked by Low Productivity Growth? Hours Worked and Labor Productivity in Switzerland in a Long‐run Perspective.
    Michael Siegenthaler.
    Review of Income and Wealth. April 08, 2014
    This paper shows that previous work has understated Switzerland's performance in terms of labor productivity growth. First, available data on hours worked are incoherent and overestimate growth in hours worked. The paper therefore establishes a consistent series of total hours worked and its components covering 1950–2010, showing that Swiss labor inputs actually were stable from 1964 to 2007. Second, long‐term improvements in Switzerland's Terms of Trade indicate that quality improvements in Swiss exports might not be fully mirrored in growth of GDP and, hence, productivity growth.
    April 08, 2014   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12120   open full text
  • Youth Poverty, Employment, and Leaving the Parental Home in Europe.
    Sara Ayllón.
    Review of Income and Wealth. April 02, 2014
    This paper studies the nature of youth poverty dynamics in Europe. First, it analyzes to what extent experiencing poverty in a given period is in itself positively related to the probability of living below the poverty line again in the future. That is, we assess the degree of poverty genuine state dependence among young people. Second, we study the interrelationships between poverty, employment, and residential emancipation. The results show that youth poverty genuine state dependence is positive and highly significant, but this scarring effect is short‐lived in Scandinavia compared to Southern or Continental Europe. Moreover, although we find a strong association between poverty and leaving home in Nordic countries, time spent in economic hardship does not last long. On the contrary, in Spain and Italy, young adults tend to leave their parental home much later in order to avoid falling into a poverty state that is more persistent.
    April 02, 2014   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12122   open full text
  • Gender Patterns and Value of Unpaid Care Work: Findings From China's First Large‐Scale Time Use Survey.
    Xiao‐yuan Dong, Xinli An.
    Review of Income and Wealth. March 24, 2014
    Using data from the 2008 China Time Use Survey, this paper examines the gender patterns of time allocation over paid work, unpaid care work, and non‐work activity and estimates the monetary value of unpaid care work. A seemingly unrelated regression (SUR) technique is applied to explore the tradeoff between the three types of activity. The estimates show that, holding constant individual characteristics and regional effects, the total work time of women is higher than that of men by 7 hours per week in the rural sector and by 10.5 hours per week in the urban sector. The monetary value of unpaid care work is estimated by five methods. Depending on the method used, the value assigned to unpaid care work varies from 25 to 32 percent of China's GDP, from 52 to 66 percent of final consumption, and from 63 to 80 percent of the gross products of tertiary industry.
    March 24, 2014   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12119   open full text
  • Improving International Comparisons of Prices at Basic Heading Level: An Application to the Asia‐Pacific Region.
    Robert J. Hill, Iqbal A. Syed.
    Review of Income and Wealth. March 12, 2014
    The International Comparisons Program (ICP) run by the World Bank compares prices and real incomes across countries, and plays a pivotal role in the Penn World Table. Using a unique dataset consisting of over 600,000 price quotes from nine countries in the Asia‐Pacific region, we consider ways of improving the basic heading price indexes that form the building blocks of ICP. Current ICP methodology computes these price indexes using the country–product–dummy (CPD) method applied to the country average prices. We contrast this approach with: (i) a weighted version of CPD; (ii) CPD applied directly to the individual price quotes; and (iii) extended versions of CPD that include adjustments for unrepresentative products, urban–rural price differences, and different outlet‐types. Also considered are new CPD‐based methods for measuring urban–rural price differences, and the implications of our findings for the downward revision in China's GDP in ICP 2005.
    March 12, 2014   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12116   open full text
  • Pensions for Singles and Couples.
    Bruce Bradbury.
    Review of Income and Wealth. February 24, 2014
    Retirement policies often seek to set pensions at levels that enable single and married pensioners to have the same standard of living. The existing literature on consumer equivalence scales provides little assistance in reaching this policy objective, as the estimated scales are both imprecise and reliant upon strong and opaque assumptions. This paper proposes an alternative modeling strategy which has low data requirements and involves the use of detailed, but transparent, assumptions about the extent of joint consumption of particular commodities. These assumptions are embedded in an economic model of household consumption and combined with household expenditure data to calculate consumer equivalence scales. It is estimated that, in 2003–04, Australian couples of Age Pension age who owned their own home needed expenditures between 1.32 and 1.60 times that of a single person. These scales were lower than those used in the pension system.
    February 24, 2014   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12106   open full text
  • A Class of Social Welfare Functions That Depend on Mean Income and Income Polarization.
    Juan Gabriel Rodríguez.
    Review of Income and Wealth. January 29, 2014
    A well‐established strategy for evaluating alternative income distributions is based on the use of an abbreviated social welfare function that depends only on mean income and an inequality index. In keeping with this literature, we study the existence of social welfare functions that can be written as a trade‐off between efficiency and income polarization. This paper proposes a class of social welfare functions consistent with the Esteban and Ray, and Duclos, Esteban and Ray income polarization indices. For this result, we expand the domain for personal preferences to incorporate not only own income but also the well‐being of others. In addition, we link our proposal to the literature on relative satisfaction. The approach is illustrated by an empirical application using the CPS database for the United States in the period 1991–2010.
    January 29, 2014   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12107   open full text
  • Disability Costs and Equivalence Scales in the Older Population in Great Britain.
    Marcello Morciano, Ruth Hancock, Stephen Pudney.
    Review of Income and Wealth. January 20, 2014
    We use a standard of living (SoL) approach to estimate older people's disability costs, using data on 8000 individuals from the U.K. Family Resources Survey. We extend previous research in two ways. First, by allowing for a more flexible relationship between SoL and income, the structure of the estimated disability cost and equivalence scale is not dictated by a restrictive functional form assumption. Second, we allow for the latent nature of disability and SoL, addressing measurement error in the disability and SoL indicators in surveys. We find that disability costs are strongly related to severity of disability, and vary with income in absolute and proportionate terms. Older people above the median disability level require an extra £99 per week (2007 prices) on average to reach the SoL of an otherwise similar person at the median. Costs faced by older people in the highest decile of disability average £180.
    January 20, 2014   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12108   open full text
  • A New Approach to Unidimensional Poverty Analysis: Application to the Tunisian Case.
    Asma Zedini, Besma Belhadj.
    Review of Income and Wealth. January 16, 2014
    Fuzzy conceptualization of privation has been a step closer to more realistic handling of poverty. However, fuzzy approaches to poverty are still grounded on parametric axioms. Moreover, construction of poverty lines within these approaches still relies on ad‐hoc methods. In this paper, we advance instead a fuzzy procedure based on the non‐parametric bootstrap method, allowing us to depict fuzzy unidimensional privation states with boundaries drawn spontaneously from data. Fuzzy non‐parametric measures of privation within each state as well as a collective fuzzy non‐parametric index of poverty are derived, along with their corresponding confidence intervals. The new approach is applied to the analysis of poverty in Tunisia in 2005.
    January 16, 2014   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12110   open full text
  • Poverty Dynamics in Turkey.
    Sırma Demir Şeker, Meltem Dayıoğlu.
    Review of Income and Wealth. January 16, 2014
    This paper examines poverty dynamics in Turkey using a nationally representative panel data covering the 2005–08 period. The aim is to understand mobility in and out of poverty and its correlates. We find that almost a quarter of the poor are persistently poor. The conditional and unconditional exit rates that we estimate are within the range of values reported for developed countries in the literature. That the income events—but not transfers—dominate both poverty entries and exits is indicative of the major role labor markets play in the lives of the poor. In particular, we argue that given the characteristics of the poor and modest levels of social assistance, the reason for mobility rates close to European averages must be sought in the informal economy.
    January 16, 2014   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12112   open full text
  • Health Policy and Equity of Health Care Financing in Australia: 1973–2010.
    Mohammad Hajizadeh, Luke Brian Connelly, James Robert Gerard Butler.
    Review of Income and Wealth. January 14, 2014
    Using data from Australian Taxation Statistics and Household Expenditure Surveys we analyze the distribution of health care financing in Australia over almost four decades. We compute Kakwani Progressivity indices for four sources of health care financing: general taxation, Medicare Levy payments, Medicare Levy Surcharge payments, and direct consumer payments, and estimate the effects of major policy changes on them. The results demonstrate that the first three of these sources of health care financing are progressive in Australia, while the distribution of direct payments is regressive. Surprisingly, we find that neither the introduction of Medicare in Australia in 1984 nor the Extended Medicare Safety Net in 2004 had significant effects on the progressivity of health care financing in Australia. By contrast, the Lifetime Cover scheme—introduced in 2000 to encourage people to buy and hold private health insurance—had a progressive effect on health care financing.
    January 14, 2014   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12103   open full text
  • The “Make‐up” of a Regression Coefficient: Gender Gaps in the European Labor Market.
    M. Grazia Pittau, Shlomo Yitzhaki, Roberto Zelli.
    Review of Income and Wealth. January 12, 2014
    We provide a comprehensive picture of the relationship between labor market outcomes and age by gender in the 28 European countries covered by the European Statistics on Income and Living Conditions. The analysis is based on a somewhat unconventional approach that refers to concentration curves in the Gini regression framework. It allows identification of ranges in the explanatory variables where local slopes change sign and/or size, i.e. the components that “make up” a regression coefficient. Gender is a crucial factor differentiating participation among workers, although employment–age profiles do not substantially differ. Relevant differences in age profiles concern working‐hours patterns: some countries are characterized by an almost specular behavior in men and women; other countries instead show similar patterns. Generally, earnings increase with age for both men and women. However, local regression coefficients are not monotonic over the entire age range and can even be locally negative in some countries.
    January 12, 2014   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12094   open full text
  • Foreign Direct Investment and the External Wealth of Nations: How Important Is Valuation?
    Jannick Damgaard, Thomas Elkjaer.
    Review of Income and Wealth. January 06, 2014
    While the balance sheet approach has increased the focus on position data, differences in valuation practices for foreign direct investment (FDI) make cross‐country comparisons difficult. To enhance comparability, the IMF's Balance of Payments and International Investment Position Manual, sixth edition, which some countries have already implemented and others will implement in the coming years, recommends seven methods for valuation of unlisted FDI. This paper demonstrates that both the valuation method and simple differences in estimation techniques can fundamentally change a country's financial balance sheet. Using Denmark as an illustration, unlisted FDI equity liabilities vary from 22 to 156 percent of GDP when applying different estimation techniques, but just one valuation method, price to earnings. These measurement uncertainties can lead to important misunderstandings and affect policy recommendations, thus pointing to the need for further international harmonization. While the results are presented in an FDI context, the uncertainties also apply to other macroeconomic datasets, including national accounts statistics.
    January 06, 2014   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12098   open full text
  • The Distributional Incidence of Growth: A Social Welfare Approach.
    Flaviana Palmisano, Vito Peragine.
    Review of Income and Wealth. January 06, 2014
    This paper provides a normative framework for the assessment of the distributional incidence of growth. By removing the anonymity axiom, such framework is able to evaluate the individual income changes over time and the reshuffling of individuals along the income distribution that are determined by the pattern of income growth. We adopt a rank dependent social welfare function expressed in terms of initial rank and individual income change and we obtain partial and complete dominance conditions over different growth paths. These dominance conditions account for the different components determining the overall impact of growth, that is the size of growth and its vertical and horizontal incidence. We then provide an empirical application for Italy: this analysis shows the distributional impact of the recent economic crisis suffered by the Italian populaltion.
    January 06, 2014   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12109   open full text
  • World Human Development: 1870–2007.
    Leandro Prados de la Escosura.
    Review of Income and Wealth. January 03, 2014
    How has wellbeing evolved over time and across regions? How does the West compare to the Rest? What explains their differences? These questions are addressed using a historical index of human development. A sustained improvement in world wellbeing has taken place since 1870. The absolute gap between OECD and the Rest widened over time, but an incomplete catching up—largely explained by education—occurred between 1913 and 1970. As the health transition was achieved in the Rest, the contribution of life expectancy to human development improvement declined and the Rest fell behind in terms of longevity. Meanwhile, in the OECD, as longevity increased, healthy years expanded. A large variance in human development is noticeable in the Rest since 1970, with East Asia, Latin America, and North Africa catching up to the OECD, and Central and Eastern Europe and Sub‐Saharan Africa falling behind.
    January 03, 2014   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12104   open full text
  • Interpolating the Lorenz Curve: Methods to Preserve Shape and Remain Consistent with the Concentration Curves for Components.
    Masato Okamoto.
    Review of Income and Wealth. November 06, 2013
    C1‐class interpolation methods that preserve monotonicity and convexity and are thus suitable for the estimation of the Lorenz curve from grouped data are not widely known. Instead, parametric models are usually applied for such estimation. Parametric models, however, have difficulty in accurately approximating every part of income/expenditure distributions. This paper proposes two types of C1‐class shape‐preserving interpolation methods. One is a piecewise rational polynomial interpolation (proposed independently by Stineman and Delbourgo) that enables consistent interpolation of the concentration curves for income/expenditure components, attaining approximately the same accuracy as that of the existing methods when applied to decile‐grouped data or to more detailed aggregation. Another is a Hybrid interpolation that employs pieces of curves derived from parametric models on end intervals. Empirical comparisons show that the Hybrid interpolation (with the assistance of parametric models for class‐boundary estimation) outperforms the existing methods even when applied to quintile‐grouped data without class boundaries.
    November 06, 2013   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12083   open full text
  • Environmental–Economic Accounting: Progress and Digression in the SEEA Revisions.
    Peter Bartelmus.
    Review of Income and Wealth. August 15, 2013
    The 1992 Earth Summit and its message of sustainable development drove the launching of a System for integrated Environmental and Economic Accounting, the SEEA. Since then, sustainable development and the SEEA have given way to green growth and green economy indicators in the latest 2012 Summit. A lengthy revision process has now produced a curtailed “SEEA central framework.” The new framework focuses on expenditures for environmental protection and resource management, and stocks and flows of “economic” resources; both are covered by the conventional national accounts. Environmental degradation, notably from pollution, is left to “experimental” ecosystem accounts. Further revision of the SEEA should reverse this retrenchment from integrative environmental–economic accounting. A comprehensive satellite system, rather than a limited statistical standard, might put the SEEA back on the policy agenda.
    August 15, 2013   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12056   open full text
  • Inequity in American Schools: A New Perspective on the Distributional Effects of School Expenditures on Economic Well‐Being.
    Melissa Holly Mahoney.
    Review of Income and Wealth. August 06, 2013
    This article explores how inequities in public K‐12 school spending impact the distribution of economic well‐being across American households with public school students in 1989 and 2000. Adapting concepts from the public finance literature, I explore the impact of school spending on the vertical and horizontal equity and its impact relative to other types of public spending on social programs and taxation. Conventionally, vertical equity refers to the size of the income gaps between households. Horizontal equity refers to the ranking of households along the income distribution with any change in ranks producing horizontal inequity. My main findings show that school spending, when converted into a component of income, served to reduce extended‐income inequality through improvements in vertical equity without the discriminatory implications of exacerbating horizontal inequity across households. Additionally, this impact was at least as large as that of spending on other social programs. This finding bolsters standard arguments for equity and progressivity of school finance across students.
    August 06, 2013   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12055   open full text
  • Adverse Shocks and Economic Insecurity: Evidence from Chile and Mexico.
    Javier Espinosa, Jorge Friedman, Carlos Yevenes.
    Review of Income and Wealth. July 29, 2013
    This paper uses multinomial logit to analyze economic insecurity for Chile and Mexico from household surveys. It analyzes the effect changes in well‐being, age, health, wealth, employment status, gender, and education have on economic insecurity. The results show that the most significant variable is current exposure to adverse events, the second most significant is age, and the third is health. The current exposure to adverse events produces great anxiety and concern about and the inability to recover from these bad events. Older households assign higher probabilities to negative prospects and are thus subject to higher levels of economic insecurity. This also occurs when the household head is seriously ill. The effect of gender and wealth on negative expectations is very small, while education only affects Mexico, and self‐employment affects only Chile. Finally, the similarities between Chile and Mexico provide evidence of identifiable patterns for economic insecurity in Latin American countries.
    July 29, 2013   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12052   open full text
  • A Micro‐Econometric Analysis of the Antipoverty Effect of Social Cash Transfers in Italy.
    Enrico Fabrizi, Maria Rosaria Ferrante, Silvia Pacei.
    Review of Income and Wealth. July 04, 2013
    We analyze the anti‐poverty effect of social cash transfers using a micro‐econometric approach. Aggregate analyses, based on comparing average poverty indicators before and after public transfers, fail to address who receives the transfers and how the transfers are distributed among the poor. We consider three dichotomous outcome variables: (i) poverty status before the receipt of transfers; (ii) the receipt of transfers; and (iii) poverty status after the receipt of transfers. We use a trivariate probit model with sample selection, connecting the outcome variables to the characteristics of the household and its head. Our empirical results highlight that the Italian social transfers system overprotects certain household typologies at the expense of others, as social transfers are primarily awarded to employees with permanent positions and the elderly, while the system is not generous enough to large households with dependant children, the self‐employed, temporary contract workers, and the unemployed.
    July 04, 2013   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12048   open full text
  • The Economic Security Index: A New Measure for Research and Policy Analysis.
    Jacob S. Hacker, Gregory A. Huber, Austin Nichols, Philipp Rehm, Mark Schlesinger, Rob Valletta, Stuart Craig.
    Review of Income and Wealth. July 04, 2013
    This article presents the Economic Security Index (ESI), a new measure of economic insecurity. The ESI assesses the individual‐level occurrence of substantial year‐to‐year declines in available household resources, accounting for fluctuations not only in income but also in out‐of‐pocket medical expenses. It also assesses whether those experiencing such declines have sufficient liquid financial wealth to buffer against these shocks. We find that insecurity—the share of individuals experiencing substantial resource declines without adequate financial buffers—has risen steadily since the mid‐1980s for virtually all subgroups of Americans, albeit with cyclical fluctuation. At the same time, we find that there is substantial disparity in the degree to which different subgroups are exposed to economic risk. As the ESI derives from a data‐independent conceptual foundation, it can be measured using different panel datasets. We find that the degree and disparity by which insecurity has risen is robust across the best available sources.
    July 04, 2013   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12053   open full text
  • Factor Components of Inequality: A Cross‐Country Study.
    Cecilia García‐Peñalosa, Elsa Orgiazzi.
    Review of Income and Wealth. July 04, 2013
    This paper uses data from the Luxembourg Income Study to examine some of the forces that have driven changes in household income inequality over the last three decades of the twentieth century. We decompose inequality for six countries (Canada, Germany, Norway, Sweden, the U.K., and the U.S.) into the three sources of market income (earnings, property income, and income from self‐employment) and taxes and transfers. Our findings indicate that although changes in the distribution of earnings are an important force behind recent trends, they are not the only one. Greater earnings dispersion has in some cases been accompanied by a reduction in the share of earnings which dampened its impact on overall household income inequality. In some countries the contribution of self‐employment income to inequality has been on the rise, while in others, increases in inequality in capital income account for a substantial fraction of the observed distributional changes.
    July 04, 2013   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12054   open full text
  • Parametric Lorenz Curves and the Modality of the Income Density Function.
    Melanie Krause.
    Review of Income and Wealth. June 30, 2013
    Similar looking Lorenz curves can imply very different income density functions and potentially lead to wrong policy implications regarding inequality. This paper derives a relation between a Lorenz curve and the modality of its underlying income density: given a parametric Lorenz curve, it is the sign of its third derivative which indicates whether the density is unimodal or zeromodal (i.e., downward‐sloping). The density modality of several important Lorenz curves such as the Pareto, Weibull, Singh–Maddala parametrizations and hierarchical families of Lorenz curves are discussed. A Lorenz curve performance comparison with Monte Carlo simulations and data from the UNU–WIDER World Income Inequality Database underlines the relevance of the theoretical result: curve‐fitting based on criteria such as mean squared error or the Gini difference might lead to a Lorenz curve implying an incorrectly‐shaped density function. It is therefore important to take into account the modality when selecting a parametric Lorenz curve.
    June 30, 2013   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12047   open full text
  • Inequality in Vietnamese Urban–Rural Living Standards, 1993–2006.
    Huong Thu Le, Alison L. Booth.
    Review of Income and Wealth. June 12, 2013
    We investigate urban–rural inequality in Vietnam using data from the Vietnam Living Standard Surveys between 1993 and 2006. We find that mean per capita expenditure of urban households is consistently twice as much as that of rural households and that the urban–rural gap monotonically increases from the poorer to the richer groups of the expenditure distribution. To isolate factors contributing to the urban–rural gap, we apply the Oaxaca–Blinder type decomposition to a newly developed unconditional quantile regression method. Factors contributing significantly to the high urban–rural gap include inter‐group differences in education, household age structure, labor market activity, geographic location and their related returns, with education playing the most important role. Over the period, consistent with the country's massive rural–urban migration, we find that domestic remittance plays a significant role in shortening the urban–rural expenditure gap in the later years, 2002 and 2006.
    June 12, 2013   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12051   open full text
  • Economic Insecurity and Fertility Intentions: The Case of Italy.
    Francesca Modena, Concetta Rondinelli, Fabio Sabatini.
    Review of Income and Wealth. May 17, 2013
    We aim to provide an explanation for the combination of the relatively low female participation rates and lowest‐low fertility levels in Italy. Starting from the assumption that childbearing decisions also depend on uncertainty about future employment, income, and wealth, we empirically assess how fertility intentions are affected by job instability, which may severely compromise the employment stability of workers, and economic disadvantages in terms of household income and wealth, which may imply insufficient means to deal with potential adverse future events, thereby generating in the household feelings of anxiety and economic insecurity. We show that the instability of women's work status (i.e., the holding of occasional and precarious jobs) significantly discourages the decision to attempt having a first child. Low levels of household wealth significantly and positively influence the decision to postpone attempting a first child. The chances of further childbirth are significantly and negatively influenced by household income insecurity.
    May 17, 2013   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12044   open full text
  • The Generalized Unit Value Index Family.
    Ludwig Auer.
    Review of Income and Wealth. May 07, 2013
    This study introduces a group of Generalized Unit Value indices that evaluate price level changes. The approach is to transform the original price and quantity data into numbers that all relate to a common unit which provides the same intrinsic worth to the consumers. When, in the transformed data, an equivalence of worth is present, then even incommensurables can be aggregated by the standard unit value method. The group of Generalized Unit Value indices includes some well‐known (Laspeyres, Paasche, Banerjee), barely known (Lehr, Davies), and previously quite unknown price indices. Using a Generalized Unit Value price index as a deflator yields a particularly appealing and useful quantity index.
    May 07, 2013   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12042   open full text
  • Welfare Compensation for Unemployment in the Great Recession.
    Mariña Fernández Salgado, Francesco Figari, Holly Sutherland, Alberto Tumino.
    Review of Income and Wealth. April 23, 2013
    This paper analyzes the extent to which tax‐benefit systems provide an automatic stabilization of income for those who became unemployed at the onset of the Great Recession. The focus of the analysis is on the compensation for earnings lost due to unemployment which is channeled through the welfare systems to this group of people who are clearly vulnerable to the recession's adverse effects. In order to assess the impact of unemployment on household income, counterfactual scenarios are simulated by using EUROMOD, the EU‐wide microsimulation model, integrated with information from the EU‐LFS data. This paper provides evidence on the differing degrees of relative and absolute resilience of the household incomes of the new unemployed. These arise from the variations in the protection offered by the national tax‐benefit systems and from the personal and household circumstances of those most recently at risk of unemployment in the countries considered.
    April 23, 2013   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12035   open full text
  • Accounting for United States Household Income Inequality Trends: The Changing Importance of Household Structure and Male and Female Labor Earnings Inequality.
    Jeff Larrimore.
    Review of Income and Wealth. April 23, 2013
    Using a shift‐share analysis on March CPS data, this paper estimates the degree to which changes in labor earnings, employment, and marriage patterns account for household income inequality growth in the United States since 1979. The factors contributing to the rapid rise in income inequality in the 1980s differ substantially from those contributing to its slower increase since that time. Unlike findings for the 1980s when changes in the correlation of spouses' earnings accounted for income inequality growth, this factor is no longer a major contributor toward its continued increase. Additionally, the 2000s business cycle is the first full business cycle in at least 30 years where changes in earnings of male household heads accounted for declines in income inequality. Instead, the continued growth in income inequality in the 2000s was accounted for primarily by increases in female earnings inequality and declines in both male and female employment.
    April 23, 2013   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12043   open full text
  • Intergenerational Income Persistence in Urban China.
    Deng Quheng, Björn Gustafsson, Li Shi.
    Review of Income and Wealth. April 18, 2013
    Intergenerational income elasticities are estimated using samples for urban China (covering many cities) for the years 1995 and 2002 and compared with results from other studies. We find that the income relation between the pairs—sons and fathers, sons and mothers, and daughters and mothers—are in 2002 all similar in magnitude. In contrast the relation between daughters' and fathers' income is weaker. The income relationship between offspring and mothers was weaker in 1995 than in 2002. Our preferred estimates of income persistence for the son/father pairs of 0.47 for 1995 and 0.53 for 2002 are higher than those which have been reported in the literature for several high‐income countries with large welfare states. The strength of the income link between sons and fathers in urban China appears to be not very different from what has been reported for countries such as Brazil, Chile, and the U.S.
    April 18, 2013   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12034   open full text
  • Wealth, Credit Conditions, and Consumption: Evidence from South Africa.
    Janine Aron, John Muellbauer.
    Review of Income and Wealth. April 18, 2013
    The role of housing wealth in explaining consumption remains controversial. This paper emphasizes credit liberalization and wealth in explaining consumption behavior in South Africa, 1971 to 2005. Results support a collateral interpretation of housing wealth affecting consumption as against a life‐cycle interpretation. Liquid and illiquid wealth time series data previously constructed by the authors from household balance sheets are used. Credit conditions are proxied by a spline function entering jointly estimated consumption, debt and income expectations equations in a “latent interactive variable equation system” (LIVES). Empirical results corroborate the theory in the paper: consumption relative to income is driven by credit liberalization and its interactions with other drivers of consumption and debt, by uncertainty, income expectations, and by fluctuations in a range of asset values and in asset accumulation. The results illuminate the monetary policy transmission mechanism in South Africa.
    April 18, 2013   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12033   open full text
  • Social Mobility in Five African Countries.
    Thomas Bossuroy, Denis Cogneau.
    Review of Income and Wealth. April 18, 2013
    This paper conceptualizes intergenerational occupational mobility between the farm and non‐farm sectors in five African countries, measures it using nationally representative household survey data, and analyzes its determinants through a comparative method based on pooled logit regressions. We first analyze intergenerational gross mobility. Until the end of the 1980s, intergenerational flows toward the non‐farm sector are high in Côte d'Ivoire and Guinea, flows toward the farm sector are more often observed in Ghana and Uganda, and Madagascar displays less mobility in either direction. The pace of change in occupational structures and the magnitude of labor income dualism between the farm and non‐farm sectors appear to explain those differences. We then net out structural change across generations and establish the first measurement of intergenerational net mobility in those five African countries. Ghana and Uganda stand out as relatively more fluid societies. Côte d'Ivoire and Guinea come next while Madagascar shows a particularly high reproduction of occupations. Educational mobility accounts for the Madagascar exception to a large extent, but not for the differences between the other countries. Spatial dualism of employment, i.e. the geographic segregation of farm and non‐farm jobs, accounts for most of those remaining differences. We argue that the main determinants of intergenerational mobility, namely income and employment dualisms, likely reflect a historical legacy of different colonial administrations.
    April 18, 2013   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12037   open full text
  • The Distribution of Economic Insecurity: Italy and the U.S. over the Great Recession.
    Conchita D'Ambrosio, Nicholas Rohde.
    Review of Income and Wealth. April 17, 2013
    We estimate the distribution of economic insecurity in Italy and the U.S. using data from 1994 to 2010. Economic insecurity for each individual is assumed to depend on both current wealth and the changes in wealth that have been experienced in the past. The first element plays the role of the buffer stock that can be relied on in the case of an adverse future event. The second element reflects the individual's confidence in his ability to overcome any losses in the future. With respect to this second element, experiences in the recent past are given greater weight than experiences that occurred in the more distant past. The results confirm that the great recession has had a dramatic effect on the distribution of economic insecurity in both countries with the effect being much stronger in the U.S.
    April 17, 2013   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12039   open full text
  • Self‐Assessed Social Position and Poverty.
    Hikaru Hasegawa, Kazuhiro Ueda.
    Review of Income and Wealth. April 16, 2013
    In this article, we use microlevel data extracted from the 2006 Japanese General Social Surveys to analyze the relationships between self‐assessed social position and socioeconomic factors such as income and poverty. We provide the posterior results of the estimation of the Bayesian multivariate ordered probit model and propose an inequality measure for self‐assessed social position on the basis of the posterior results. We call the inequality measure “regret” and show that the distributions of regret differ for people above and below the poverty line.
    April 16, 2013   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12036   open full text
  • Modeling of Income and Indicators of Poverty and Social Exclusion Using the Generalized Beta Distribution of the Second Kind.
    Monique Graf, Desislava Nedyalkova.
    Review of Income and Wealth. April 15, 2013
    There are three reasons why estimation of parametric income distributions may be useful when empirical data and estimators are available: to stabilize estimation; to gain insight into the relationships between the characteristics of the theoretical distribution and a set of indicators, e.g. by sensitivity plots; and to deduce the whole distribution from known empirical indicators, when the raw data are not available. The European Union Statistics on Income and Living Conditions (EU‐SILC) survey is used to address these issues. In order to model the income distribution, we consider the generalized beta distribution of the second kind (GB2). A pseudo‐likelihood approach for fitting the distribution is considered, which takes into account the design features of the EU‐SILC survey. An ad‐hoc procedure for robustification of the sampling weights, which improves estimation, is presented. This method is compared to a non‐linear fit from the indicators. Variance estimation within a complex survey setting of the maximum pseudo‐likelihood estimates is done by linearization (a sandwich variance estimator), and a simplified formula for the sandwich variance, which accounts for clustering, is given. Performance of the fit and estimated indicators is evaluated graphically and numerically.
    April 15, 2013   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12031   open full text
  • Does Contracting Make Farmers Happy? Evidence from Senegal.
    Senakpon F. A. Dedehouanou, Johan Swinnen, Miet Maertens.
    Review of Income and Wealth. April 15, 2013
    In this paper we use a subjective well‐being approach to evaluate the welfare impact of contract‐farming. We analyze the impact of contract‐farming on self‐reported happiness using original panel data from a farm‐household survey in the Niayes region in Senegal. We use different econometric techniques and show that, when correcting for time invariant unobserved heterogeneity, contract‐farming has a positive effect on subjective well‐being. We find diverging effects for different types of contracts, suggesting that contract‐farming contributes more to farmers’ subjective well‐being under certain conditions and contract design. Our main finding corroborates earlier findings from empirical studies using cross‐sectional data and income‐based measures of welfare. In line with earlier results from the subjective well‐being literature, we find that absolute income has a positive but decreasing effect on subjective well‐being while comparison income has a negative effect. Also household demographic characteristics, their land and livestock assets, and housing indicators affect subjective well‐being.
    April 15, 2013   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12041   open full text
  • Economic Insecurity in Transition: A Primary Commodities Perspective.
    Artjoms Ivlevs.
    Review of Income and Wealth. April 12, 2013
    This paper studies the individual and household‐level determinants of economic insecurity in post‐socialist countries. Exploring subjective, backward‐ and forward‐looking measures of economic insecurity, the paper focuses on: (1) the perceptions of past affordability of primary commodities; and (2) worries about their consumption in the future. We find that low affordability of primary commodities and big worries about their future consumption are experienced by rural residents, people with poor health, and households headed by females, less‐educated, and unemployed persons. In addition, low affordability is reported by people with low incomes and non‐Russian ethnic minorities, while high affordability is reported by people for whom remittances are the main source of income. Worries about primary commodities are more prevalent among “younger” households, big‐city dwellers and people receiving moderate amounts of remittances. People who have experienced lower affordability of primary commodities in the recent past report higher worries about their consumption in the future.
    April 12, 2013   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12038   open full text
  • Disentangling the Poverty Effects of Sectoral Output, Prices, and Policies in India.
    Sushanta K. Mallick.
    Review of Income and Wealth. April 04, 2013
    This paper attempts to disentangle the poverty effects of key policy variables that directly affect the poor (namely the government‐led channel of development spending and financing) in both agricultural and non‐agricultural sectors after accounting for the effect of respective sectoral per capita income and prices, using data from India over five decades. The paper emphasizes the sectoral composition of income and prices as mechanisms influencing the level of poverty and establishes empirically that it is the rise in non‐agricultural per capita income that reduces rural poverty via the channel of internal migration, after having controlled for the variation in key components of fiscal spending and monetary/financial policy via the availability of credit. Uneven sectoral growth pattern explains why urban poverty becomes a spill‐over of persistent rural poverty when the agricultural sector shrinks. While checking for robustness, there is evidence that the rise in non‐agricultural income alone may not reduce rural poverty, when measured in terms of rural infant mortality rate as a non‐income indicator of well‐being.
    April 04, 2013   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12026   open full text
  • Intergenerational Mobility in the United States and Great Britain: A Comparative Study of Parent–Child Pathways.
    Jo Blanden, Robert Haveman, Timothy Smeeding, Kathryn Wilson.
    Review of Income and Wealth. April 03, 2013
    We build on cross‐national research to examine the relationships underlying estimates of relative intergenerational mobility in the United States and Great Britain using harmonized longitudinal data and focusing on men. We examine several pathways by which parental status is related to offspring status, including education, labor market attachment, occupation, marital status, and health, and perform several sensitivity analyses to test the robustness of our results. We decompose differences between the two nations into that part attributable to the strength of the relationship between parental income and the child's characteristics and the labor market return to those child characteristics. We find that the relationships underlying these intergenerational linkages differ in systematic ways between the two nations. In the United States, primarily because of the higher returns to education and skills, the pathway through offspring education is relatively more important than it is in Great Britain; by contrast, in Great Britain the occupation pathway forms the primary channel of intergenerational persistence.
    April 03, 2013   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12032   open full text
  • The Weight of Success: The Body Mass Index and Economic Well‐Being in Southern Africa.
    Martin Wittenberg.
    Review of Income and Wealth. March 27, 2013
    We show that body mass increases with economic resources among most Southern Africans, although not all. Among Black South Africans the relationship is non‐decreasing over virtually the entire range of incomes/wealth. Furthermore in this group other measures of “success” (e.g., employment and education) are also associated with increases in body mass. This is true in both 1998 (the Demographic and Health Survey) and 2008 (National Income Dynamics Survey). A similar relationship holds among residents of Lesotho, Swaziland, Mozambique, Malawi, and Namibia. This suggests that body mass can be used as a crude measure of well‐being. This allows us to examine the vexed question in South African labor economics whether there is involuntary unemployment. The fact that the unemployed are lighter than the employed, even when we control for household fixed effects, suggests that they are not choosing this state.
    March 27, 2013   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12029   open full text
  • Country Differences in Material Deprivation in Europe.
    E. Bárcena‐Martín, B. Lacomba, A. I. Moro‐Egido, S. Pérez‐Moreno.
    Review of Income and Wealth. March 19, 2013
    This paper assesses to what extent differences in the characteristics of individuals (micro‐level perspective) and country‐specific factors (macro‐level perspective) can explain country differences with respect to material deprivation levels. Thus, our work aims to simultaneously consider the macro dimension and the predominantly individually‐oriented study field of material deprivation using multilevel techniques. We make use of the European Union Statistics on Income and Living Conditions. Our results show that country‐specific factors seem to be much more relevant than individual effects in explaining country differences in material deprivation. We estimate that the introduction of country‐specific factors reduces the proportion of total variance due to between‐country differences in deprivation by 72.7 percent, while individual‐level variables reduce this proportion by only 9.4 percent. We also show, through interaction variables, that the effect of sociodemographic characteristics can be shaped by institutional and structural factors, especially by the level of GDP.
    March 19, 2013   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12030   open full text
  • Export Growth, Capacity Utilization, and Productivity Growth: Evidence from the Canadian Manufacturing Plants.
    John R. Baldwin, Wulong Gu, Beiling Yan.
    Review of Income and Wealth. March 13, 2013
    Aggregate labor and multifactor productivity growth slowed substantially post‐2000 in the Canadian manufacturing sector. To examine the source of the decline, this paper proposes a decomposition method that delves deeper into the two micro‐components of aggregate productivity growth: a within‐plant component and a between‐plant component. The decomposition builds on earlier work by Jorgenson and his collaborators that decomposes aggregate productivity growth into its industry components, but applies it to the plant level and introduces non‐neoclassical features of the plant‐level economic environment. It finds that the preponderance of the aggregate labor and multifactor productivity growth slowdown is due to the pro‐cyclical nature of productivity growth arising from capacity utilization. Almost all of the aggregate productivity growth slowdown is driven by exporters, as exporters experienced large declines in labor productivity growth in the post‐2000 period as a result of large declines in their capacity utilization.
    March 13, 2013   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12028   open full text
  • Changes in the Income Distribution of the Dutch Elderly between 1989 and 2020: a Dynamic Microsimulation.
    Marike Knoef, Rob Alessie, Adriaan Kalwij.
    Review of Income and Wealth. March 08, 2013
    This paper analyzes the income distribution of the Dutch elderly using a microsimulation model. Microsimulation models allow for detailed estimates of the income distribution. Our model deviates from traditional models by explicitly considering the persistency and heteroskedasticity of real income shocks. In this way, modeling all underlying processes influencing household income becomes less necessary, which can improve the trade‐off between refinement and tractability of microsimulation models. We show the results of three model specifications with different levels of refinement. The results are in line and indicate that between 2008 and 2020, the highest predicted annual growth among the elderly is for median‐income households (about 1.2 percent). High‐income households have a somewhat lower predicted growth (about 1.0 percent) and low‐income households only have a predicted annual growth of 0.5 percent. Inequality therefore seems to increase in the lower part of the distribution, while it will probably decline in the upper part of the distribution.
    March 08, 2013   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12025   open full text
  • Intangible Capital and Labor Productivity Growth: Panel Evidence for the EU from 1998–2005.
    Felix Roth, Anna‐Elisabeth Thum.
    Review of Income and Wealth. February 04, 2013
    Using new international comparable data on intangible capital investment by business within a panel analysis between 1998 and 2005 in an EU country sample, a positive and significant relationship between intangible capital investment and labor productivity growth is detected. This relationship proves to be robust to a range of alterations. The empirical analysis confirms previous findings that the inclusion of business intangible capital investment in the asset boundary of the national accounting framework increases the rate of change of output per hour worked more rapidly. In addition, intangible capital is able to explain a significant portion of the unexplained international variance in labor productivity growth, and becomes a dominant source of growth.
    February 04, 2013   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12009   open full text
  • Productivity in a Distorted Market: The Case of Brazil's Retail Sector.
    Gaaitzen J. Vries.
    Review of Income and Wealth. January 25, 2013
    In a model of monopolistic competition with heterogeneous firms, distortions in prices drive a wedge between the marginal revenue products of factor inputs across firms. We use census data for Brazil's retail sector to study implications for aggregate productivity and relate distortions to regional variation in regulation using a differences‐in‐differences approach. Taxes, entry regulation, and access to credit may create distortions to output and capital that varies by firm size. Potential gains from reallocation have not diminished despite the process of services liberalization in the 1990s.
    January 25, 2013   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12017   open full text
  • Measuring the Underground Economy with the Currency Demand Approach: A Reinterpretation of the Methodology, With an Application to Italy.
    Guerino Ardizzi, Carmelo Petraglia, Massimiliano Piacenza, Gilberto Turati.
    Review of Income and Wealth. January 25, 2013
    We contribute to the debate on how to assess the size of the underground (or shadow) economy by proposing a reinterpretation of the traditional Currency Demand Approach (CDA) à la Tanzi. In particular, we introduce three main innovations. First, we take a direct measure of the value of cash transactions—the flow of cash withdrawn from bank accounts relative to total non‐cash payments—as the dependent variable in the money demand equation. This allows us to avoid unrealistic assumptions on the velocity of money and the absence of any irregular transaction in a given year, overcoming two severe critiques to the traditional CDA. Second, in place of the tax burden level, usually intended as the main motivation for non‐compliance, we include among the covariates two direct indicators of detected tax evasion. Finally, we control also for the role of illegal production considering crimes like drug dealing and prostitution, which—jointly with the shadow economy—contributes to the larger aggregate of the non‐observed economy and represents a significant component of total cash payments. We propose then an application of this “modified CDA” to a panel of 91 Italian provinces for the years 2005–08.
    January 25, 2013   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12019   open full text
  • An African Growth Miracle? Or: What do Asset Indices Tell Us About Trends in Economic Performance?
    Kenneth Harttgen, Stephan Klasen, Sebastian Vollmer.
    Review of Income and Wealth. January 20, 2013
    Using changes in the possession of household assets over the past 20 years, several recent papers have argued that economic growth and poverty reduction in Africa was substantially better than suggested by national income data and income poverty statistics, which suffer from well‐known weaknesses. We scrutinize these claims and first argue that trends in assets provide biased proxies for trends in incomes or consumption. In particular we show that the relationship between growth in assets and growth in incomes or consumption is extremely weak; instead, we find evidence of asset drift using macro and micro data, which is consistent with the claims we make about possible biases in the use of asset indices. As a result, we find no evidence supporting the claim of an African growth miracle that extends beyond what has been reported in official GDP/capita and consumption figures.
    January 20, 2013   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12016   open full text
  • The Changing Shape of Global Inequality 1820–2000; Exploring a New Dataset.
    Jan Luiten Zanden, Joerg Baten, Peter Foldvari, Bas Leeuwen.
    Review of Income and Wealth. January 16, 2013
    A new dataset for charting the development of global inequality between 1820 and 2000 is presented, based on a large variety of sources and methods for estimating (gross household) income inequality. On this basis we estimate the evolution of global income inequality over the past two centuries. Two sets of benchmarks about between‐country inequality (the Maddison 1990 benchmark and the recent 2005 ICP round) are taken into account. We find that between 1820 and 1950, increasing per capita income is combined with increasing global inequality. After 1950, global inequality as measured by the Gini coefficient or the Theil index remains more or less constant. It also appears that the global income distribution was uni‐modal in the nineteenth century, became increasingly bi‐modal between 1910 and 1970 with two world wars, a depression and de‐globalization, and was suddenly transformed back into a uni‐modal distribution between 1980 and 2000.
    January 16, 2013   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12014   open full text
  • Africa's Statistical Tragedy.
    Shantayanan Devarajan.
    Review of Income and Wealth. January 10, 2013
    While Africa may have overcome its growth tragedy, it is facing a statistical tragedy, in that the statistical foundations of the recent growth in per‐capita GDP and reduction in poverty are quite weak. In many countries, GDP accounts use old methods, population censuses are out of date, and poverty estimates are infrequent and often not comparable over time. The proximate reasons have to do with weak capacity, inadequate funding, and a lack of coordination of statistical activities. But the underlying cause may be the political sensitivity of these statistics, and some donors' tendency to go around countries' own National Statistical Development Strategies (NSDS). Greater openness and transparency of statistics, and a higher profile for the NSDS, possibly with “naming and shaming” of those who try to circumvent it, may help Africans turn around their statistical tragedy.
    January 10, 2013   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12013   open full text
  • The Relative Price of Services.
    Robert Inklaar, Marcel P. Timmer.
    Review of Income and Wealth. December 20, 2012
    Prices of GDP relative to the exchange rate increase with income per capita, which is known as the Penn‐effect. This is generally attributed to services being cheaper relative to goods in poorer countries. In this paper we re‐examine the Penn‐effect based on a new set of PPPs for industry output. These are estimated in an augmented Geary–Khamis approach using prices for final goods, exports, and imports. The resulting multilateral PPPs cover 35 industries in 42 countries for the year 2005. We find large variation in relative prices of various services industries. In particular the Penn‐effect appears to be mostly due to the rapidly rising output prices of non‐market services. This seems related mainly to the high labor intensity of that sector.
    December 20, 2012   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12012   open full text
  • How Does Fiscal Consolidation Impact on Income Inequality?
    Luca Agnello, Ricardo M. Sousa.
    Review of Income and Wealth. December 17, 2012
    In this paper, we assess the impact of fiscal consolidation on income inequality. Using a panel of 18 industrialized countries from 1978 to 2009, we find that income inequality significantly rises during periods of fiscal consolidation. In addition, while fiscal policy that is driven by spending cuts seems to be detrimental for income distribution, tax hikes seem to have an equalizing effect. We also show that the size of the fiscal consolidation program (in percentage of GDP) has an impact on income inequality. In particular, when consolidation plans represent a small share of GDP, the income gap widens, suggesting that the burden associated with the effort affects disproportionately households at the bottom of the income distribution. Considering the linkages between banking crises and fiscal consolidation, we find that the effect on the income gap is amplified when fiscal adjustments take place after the resolution of such financial turmoil. Similarly, fiscal consolidation programs combined with inflation are likely to increase inequality and the effects of fiscal adjustments on inequality are amplified during periods of relatively low growth. Our results also provide support for a non‐linear relationship between inequality and income and corroborate the idea that trade can promote a more equal distribution of income.
    December 17, 2012   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12004   open full text
  • Broke, Ill, and Obese: Is There an Effect of Household Debt on Health?
    Matthias Keese, Hendrik Schmitz.
    Review of Income and Wealth. December 07, 2012
    We analyze the association between household indebtedness and different health outcomes using data from the German Socio‐Economic Panel from 1999 to 2009. We control for unobserved heterogeneity by applying fixed‐effects methods and furthermore use a subsample of constantly employed individuals plus lagged debt variables to reduce problems of reverse causality. We apply different measures of household indebtedness, such as the percentage shares of household income spent on consumer credit and home loan repayments (which indicate the severity of household indebtedness) and a binary variable of relative overindebtedness (which indicates a precarious debt situation). We find all debt measures to be strongly correlated with health satisfaction, mental health, and obesity. This relationship vanishes for obesity after controlling for unobserved heterogeneity while it stays significant with respect to worse physical and mental health.
    December 07, 2012   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12002   open full text
  • Comparability of GDP estimates in Sub‐Saharan Africa: The effect of Revisions in Sources and Methods Since Structural Adjustment.
    Morten Jerven.
    Review of Income and Wealth. December 06, 2012
    The unreliability of African income estimates was highlighted when Ghana announced that GDP estimates were revised upwards by 60.3 percent in November 2010. Similar revisions are to be expected in other countries. Many statistical offices are currently using outdated base years. It is argued that with the current uneven application of methods and poor availability of data, any ranking of countries according to GDP levels is misleading. The paper emphasizes the challenges for “data users” in light of these revisions. GDP data are disseminated through international organizations, but without any detailed data descriptions. It is argued that many statistical offices in Sub‐Saharan Africa struggled to recover from the structural adjustment period, and the offices have not had the capacity to handle other challenges such as providing data to monitor the Millennium Development Goals. Currently, neither data users nor data producers are getting the assistance they need.
    December 06, 2012   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12006   open full text
  • Non‐Linear Pricing and Price Indexes: Evidence and Implications from Scanner Data.
    Kevin J. Fox, Daniel Melser.
    Review of Income and Wealth. November 29, 2012
    Non‐linear pricing, the fact that prices do not necessarily change in proportion to size, is a ubiquitous phenomenon. However, it has been neither particularly well understood nor well measured. Non‐linear pricing is of practical importance for statistical agencies who, in constructing price indexes, are often required to compare the relative price of a product‐variety of two different sizes. It is usually assumed that prices change one‐for‐one with package and pack size (e.g. a 1‐liter cola costs half as much as a 2‐liter bottle). We question the wisdom of such an assumption and outline a model to flexibly estimate the price‐size function. Applying our model to a large U.S. scanner dataset for carbonated beverages, at a disaggregated level, we find very significant discounts for larger‐sized products. This highlights the need to pursue methods such as those advocated in this paper.
    November 29, 2012   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12000   open full text
  • Post‐Laspeyres: The Case for a New Formula for Compiling Consumer Price Indexes.
    Paul Armknecht, Mick Silver.
    Review of Income and Wealth. November 29, 2012
    Consumer price indexes (CPIs) are commonly compiled at the higher (weighted) level using Laspeyres‐type arithmetic averages. This paper questions the suitability of such formulas and considers two counterpart alternatives that use geometric averaging, the Geometric Young and the (price‐updated) Geometric Lowe. The paper provides a formal decomposition and understanding of the differences between the two. Empirical results are provided using United States CPI data. The findings lead to an advocacy of quite simple variants of a hybrid formula suggested by Lent and Dorfman that use the same data as Laspeyres‐type indexes but substantially reduce their bias.
    November 29, 2012   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12005   open full text
  • Deprivation and Subjective Well‐Being: Evidence from Panel Data.
    Maite Blázquez Cuesta, Santiago Budría.
    Review of Income and Wealth. November 29, 2012
    This paper uses data from the 2000–08 waves of the German Socio‐Economic Panel dataset (SOEP) to assess the impact of deprivation in various life domains upon individual well‐being. Unobserved heterogeneity is controlled for by means of a random effects model extended to include a Mundlak term and explicit controls for the respondents' personality traits. The paper shows that people care about social comparison information in a number of domains, not just income. Using an equivalent income approach, the estimates suggest that a one standard deviation deterioration of the individual position in the income distribution is as important as a 33.5 percent decrease in own income. This monetary equivalent amounts to an income variation of between 25 and 43 percent when it comes to other deprivation domains, including durables, accommodation, health, and social relations. These results recommend that in the fight against deprivation more emphasis should be directed to these non‐monetary relevant dimensions.
    November 29, 2012   doi: 10.1111/roiw.12003   open full text
  • Inequality of Happiness in the U.S.: 1972–2010.
    Indranil Dutta, James Foster.
    Review of Income and Wealth. November 09, 2012
    It is well accepted that a country's GDP may not fully reflect its level of well‐being. In recent years, happiness has emerged as an alternative indicator of well‐being, and research has mainly focused on determining the level of happiness. While it is important to look at the level, the distribution of happiness is also a salient aspect in any evaluation of inequality. There has been a growing interest in the distribution of happiness, although the ordinal nature of the data makes the use of standard inequality measures problematic. Our paper contributes to the literature by exploring the distributions for the U.S. from 1972 to 2010. Based on new methods developed for ordinal data, we are able to overcome the problems associated with ordinality and obtain unambiguous rankings of happiness distributions. We also compute the level of happiness inequality using existing measures based on median centred approaches. Further, we decompose the median based inequality measures of happiness by gender, race, and region.
    November 09, 2012   doi: 10.1111/j.1475-4991.2012.00527.x   open full text
  • Intangibles, Can They Explain the Dispersion in Return Rates?
    Bernd Görzig, Martin Gornig.
    Review of Income and Wealth. November 05, 2012
    It is proven that the observed return rates on capital have an upward bias if firms are producing with unobserved intangible capital. Using a comprehensive firm level database for Germany, this theoretical preposition is supported empirically. Furthermore, by making unobserved intangible capital observable, dispersion in return rates is dramatically reduced. The results support the assumption that a considerable part of the observed dispersion in return rates among firms is attributable to unobserved capital formation in intangible capital.
    November 05, 2012   doi: 10.1111/j.1475-4991.2012.00525.x   open full text
  • Nonstationarity and Stochastic Stability of Relative Income Clubs.
    Mahmoud A. El‐Gamal, Deockhyun Ryu.
    Review of Income and Wealth. October 12, 2012
    The recent literature on “convergence” of cross‐country per capita incomes has been dominated by the two hypotheses of “global convergence” and “club‐convergence,” pertaining to limits of estimated income distribution dynamics. Utilizing a new measure of “stochastic stability,” we establish two stylized facts regarding short‐ and medium‐term distribution dynamics. The first is non‐stationarity of transition dynamics, in the sense of changing transition kernels, and the second is emergence, disappearance, and re‐emergence of a “stochastically stable” middle income group. This middle income group emerges as the gap between rich and poor clubs gets larger, and it changes the dynamics of transition to and from the rich and poor clubs, eventually narrowing the gap between the poor and rich as the middle club vanishes. Analyzing the stochastic stability of middle‐income groups is thus a first step toward understanding higher‐order dynamics of narrowing or widening of the gap between rich and poor countries.
    October 12, 2012   doi: 10.1111/j.1475-4991.2012.00521.x   open full text
  • Patterns of Welfare Dependence before and after a Reform: Evidence from First Generation Immigrants and Natives in Germany.
    Regina T. Riphahn, Christoph Wunder.
    Review of Income and Wealth. September 02, 2012
    This paper studies the patterns of welfare dependence among first generation immigrants and natives in Germany before and after a substantial recent reform of the welfare system. Using data from the German Socio‐Economic Panel Study, the analysis presents life cycle trajectories of transfer receipt for immigrants and natives and studies the correlation between contextual factors and transfer receipt. We find no statistically significant differences in the probability of transfer receipt between immigrants and natives once socioeconomic characteristics are taken into account. Being a single parent, labor market status, and human capital are most closely correlated with the incidence of transfer receipt for both natives and immigrants. Interestingly, recent welfare reforms did not reverse prior patterns of welfare dependence.
    September 02, 2012   doi: 10.1111/j.1475-4991.2012.00518.x   open full text
  • Price Levels And Economic Growth: Making Sense Of Revisions To Data On Real Incomes.
    Martin Ravallion.
    Review of Income and Wealth. June 14, 2012
    The price surveys from the 2005 International Comparison Program (ICP) imply substantially lower levels of GDP at purchasing power parity (PPP) for many developing countries than prior estimates. While some observers have questioned the data, this paper argues that the pattern of changes in PPPs between ICP rounds makes economic sense. Consistently with the original Balassa–Samuelson model, more rapidly growing economies experienced steeper increases in their PPPs relative to official exchange rates. This effect was even stronger for poor countries. Taking account of this effect would reduce the need for such large data revisions when new ICP data become available.
    June 14, 2012   doi: 10.1111/j.1475-4991.2012.00510.x   open full text
  • Attrition and Follow‐Up Rules in Panel Surveys: Insights from a Tracking Experience in Madagascar.
    Julia Vaillant.
    Review of Income and Wealth. May 03, 2012
    Most longitudinal surveys recontact households only if they are still living in the same dwelling, producing very high attrition rates, especially in developing countries where rural–urban migration is prevalent. In this paper, we discuss the implications of the various follow‐up rules used in longitudinal surveys in the light of an original tracking survey from Madagascar. This survey attempted in 2005 to search and interview all individuals who were living in the village of Bepako in 1995, the baseline year of a yearly survey, the Rural Observatories. The tracking survey yielded an individual recontact rate of 78.8 percent, more than halving attrition compared to a standard dwelling‐based follow‐up rule. The tracking reveals a very high rate of out‐migration (38.8 percent) and household break‐ups, as three‐quarters of recontacted households had divided between 1995 and 2005. The average income growth of the sample over the period increases by 28 percentage points when follow‐up is extended to those who moved out of their household or village, suggesting that dwelling‐based panels give a partial view of the welfare dynamics of the baseline sample. A higher baseline income per capita is associated with a higher probability of staying in Bepako and of being found in the tracking if one moved out. The hardest people to find are the poorest and most isolated. Special attention should be paid to collecting data that enable the identification and follow‐up of individuals, without which attrition is likely to remain a source of bias even after a tracking procedure is carried out.
    May 03, 2012   doi: 10.1111/j.1475-4991.2012.00505.x   open full text