CONTENTS
Contributors xiii
Introduction: Income Distribution Today xvii
Acknowledgments lxv
Volume 2A
Part I. Concept and Approaches 1
1. The Principal Problem in Political Economy: Income Distribution
in the History of Economic Thought 3
Agnar Sandmo
1.1.
Introduction 41.2. The Positive Economics of Income Distribution 6
1.3. ValueJudgmentsandRedistribution 37
1.4. Concluding Reflections 58
Acknowledgments 61
References 62
2. Inequality, Income, and Well-Being 67
Koen Decancq, Marc Fleurbaey, Erik Schokkaert
2.1. Introduction 68
2.2. A Brief Historical Sketch 72
2.3. Inequality of What? 75
2.4. MultidimensionalInequalityandDominance 105
2.5. Applications 113
2.6. Conclusion 133
Acknowledgment 134
References 134
3. MultidimensionalPovertyandInequality 141
Rolf Aaberge, Andrea Brandolini
3.1. Introduction 142
3.2. Preliminaries: Dimensions, Indicators, and Weights 148
3.3. Multidimensional Poverty Measurement 156
3.4. MultidimensionalInequalityMeasurement 189
3.5. Summary and Conclusions 200
Acknowledgments 203
References 203
4. EqualityofOpportunity 217
John E. Roemer, Alain Trannoy
4.1. Introduction 218
4.2. Egalitarian Political Philosophy Since Rawls 220
4.3. A Model and Algorithm for Equal-Opportunity Policy 229
4.4. A More General Approach 239
4.5. TheFleurbaey-ManiquetApproach 243
4.6. Economic Development 248
4.7. Dynamics 256
4.8. Preparing the Ground for Empirical Analysis 259
4.9. Do People Advocate EOp? Lessons from Questionnaires and Experiments 261
4.10. Inequality of Opportunity: Measurement Issues and Empirical Results 272
4.11. Results 289
4.12. Conclusion 294
Acknowledgments 296
References 296
5. Polarization 301
Jean-Yves Duclos, Andre-Marie Taptue
5.1. Introduction 302
5.2.
Motivation 3065.3. Notation 309
5.4. Income Polarization 310
5.5. Bipolarization 318
5.6. Social Polarization 337
5.7. Socioeonomic Polarization 341
5.8. Multidimensional Polarization 348
5.9. Polarization in Practice 351
5.10. Conclusion 355
Acknowledgments 355
References 355
6. Statistical Methods for Distributional Analysis 359
FrankA. Cowell, Emmanuel Flachaire
6.1. Introduction 361
6.2. Data 364
6.3. Density Estimation 369
6.4. Welfare Indices 394
6.5. Distributional Comparisons 423
6.6. Other Estimation Problems 437
6.7. Conclusions 452
Acknowledgments 458
References 458
Part II. Evidence 467
7. Long-RunTrendsintheDistributionofIncomeandWealth 469
Jesper Roine, Daniel Waldenstrom
7.1. Introduction 471
7.2. Long-Run Trends in Income Inequality 477
7.3. Long-RunTrendsinWealthInequality 511
7.4. DeterminantsofLong-RunTrendsinInequality 546
7.5. Summary and Concluding Remarks 567
Acknowledgments 570
Appendix 570
References 581
8. Post-1970 Trends in Within-Country Inequality and Poverty:
Rich and Middle-Income Countries 593
Salvatore Morelli, Timothy Smeeding, Jeffrey Thompson
8.1. Introduction 594
8.2. ChoosingaYardstickandItsComponents 595
8.3. Poverty Measurement and Trends 604
8.4. Inequality in Income 619
8.5. Summary and Conclusions 687
Acknowledgments 690
References 690
9. Recent Trends in Inequality and Poverty in Developing Countries 697
Facundo Alvaredo, Leonardo Gasparini
9.1. Introduction 698
9.2. The Developing World: Characterization and Data 700
9.3. Inequality: Levels 705
9.4. Inequality: Trends 720
9.5. Poverty: Levels 753
9.6. Poverty: Trends 763
9.7. Concluding Remarks 789
Acknowledgment 790
Appendix 791
References 796
10. Income Mobility 807
Markus Jantti, Stephen P. Jenkins
10.1. Introduction 808
10.2. MobilityConcepts 810
10.3. MobilityMeasurement 822
10.4. Intragenerational Mobility: Evidence 855
10.5.
Intergenerational Mobility: Evidence 88910.6. Conclusions 923
Acknowledgments 924
References 924
11. TheGlobalDistributionofIncome 937
Sudhir Anand, Paul Segal
11.1. Introduction 938
11.2. Why Study the Global Distribution of Income? 939
11.3. Which Global Distribution of Income? 941
11.4. Data 945
11.5. Estimating the Global Distribution of Income 953
11.6. Between-and Within-Country Inequality 963
11.7. RelativeandAbsoluteGlobalInequality 967
11.8. GlobalPoverty 968
11.9. Conclusion 973
Acknowledgments 975
Appendix. Estimates of Global Inequality Based on the Common Sample Over Time 975
References 977
12. GenderInequality 981
Sophie Ponthieux, Dominique Meurs
12.1. Introduction 983
12.2. Individual and/or Household Income and Living Standards: From
Measurement Issues to Conceptual Issues and Back to Measurement Issues 985
12.3. The Gender Wage Gap 1005
12.4. The Case of Self-Employment 1050
12.5. The Gender Gap in Pensions 1059
12.6. Nonmarket Work, the Gender Division of Labor, and Gender Inequality 1068
12.7. Wealth and Gender 1105
12.8. Conclusion 1117
References 1119
13. Attitudes to Income Inequality: Experimental and Survey Evidence 1147
Andrew E. Clark, Conchita D'Ambrosio
13.1. Introduction 1148
13.2. TheComparativeView 1151
13.3. TheNormativeView 1170
13.4. OutstandingIssues 1185
13.5. Conclusion 1199
Acknowledgments 1201
References 1201
Index 1209
Volume 2B
PartIII. Explanations 1227
14. InequalityinMacroeconomics 1229
Vincenzo Quadrini, Jose-Victor Rios-Rull
14.1. Some Facts on the Income and Wealth Distribution 1233
14.2. Modeling the Sources of Macro Inequality 1236
14.3. TheDynamicsofInequality 1256
14.4. Inequality and Financial Markets 1272
14.5. The Political Economy Channel 1288
14.6. Conclusion 1295
Acknowledgments 1295
Appendix A. Derivation of the Inequality Index 1296
Appendix B.
Wage Equation with Endogenous Debt 1297References 1298
15. Wealth and Inheritance in the Long Run 1303
Thomas Piketty, Gabriel Zucman
15.1. Introduction 1304
15.2. TheLong-RunEvolutionofWealth-IncomeRatios 1308
15.3. The Long-Run Evolution of Wealth Concentration 1319
15.4. The Long-Run Evolution of the Share of Inherited Wealth 1326
15.5. Accounting for the Evidence: Models and Predictions 1342
15.6. Concluding Comments and Research Prospects 1365
Acknowledgments 1366
References 1366
16. Intrahousehold Inequality 1369
Pierre-Andre Chiappori, Costas Meghir
16.1. Introduction 1370
16.2. The Collective Model: Concepts, Definitions, and Axioms 1375
16.3. Modeling Household Behavior: The Collective Model 1378
16.4. TheDeterminantsofIntrahouseholdAllocation 1386
16.5. Identification 1390
16.6. Empirical Findings 1403
16.7. Conclusion 1415
Acknowledgments 1416
References 1416
17. HealthandInequality 1419
Owen O'Donnell, Eddy Van Doorslaer, Tom Van Ourti
17.1. Introduction 1420
17.2. Health and Income: A First Pass 1425
17.3. Health Determination of Economic Inequality 1436
17.4. Economic Determination of Health Inequality 1476
17.5. Economic Inequality as a Determinant of Health 1499
17.6. Conclusion 1513
Acknowledgments 1516
Appendix 1516
Data Sources 1520
References 1520
18. Labor Market Institutions and the Dispersion of Wage Earnings 1535
Wiemer Salverda, Daniele Checchi
18.1. Introduction 1536
18.2. Earnings Distribution and Income Distribution: A Short Tale of Two Long Literatures 1540
18.3. Wage Dispersion: Measurement and Stylized Facts 1561
18.4. Theoretical Approaches to Wage Dispersion and the Role of Institutions 1593
18.5. LMIs and Wage Inequality: An Empirical Assessment 1623
18.6. Conclusion and Future Research 1655
Acknowledgments 1657
Appendix A. Country Codes 1658
Appendix B. Data Sources and Additional Tables on Earnings 1659
Appendix C.
Data Sources and Descriptive Statistics on LMIs 1665Appendix D. Literature Summary Tables: Household Incomes and Earnings
and Wage Dispersion and Institutions 1670
References 1714
19. Cross-Country Evidence of the Multiple Causes of Inequality
ChangesintheOECDArea 1729
Michael F. Forster, Istvan Gyorgy Toth
19.1. Introduction 1730
19.2. The Research Question and Methods to Explain Inequality and its Change 1732
19.3. DataSourcesforCross-CountryStudies 1739
19.4. DefinitionofInequalityMeasuresandTheirVariability 1750
19.5. Drivers of Inequality: Main Explanations 1755
19.6. Conclusions: Major Findings from the Literature Survey and Implications
for Further Research 1799
Acknowledgments 1831
References 1831
20. Globalization and Inequality 1845
Ravi Kanbur
20.1. Introduction 1846
20.2. Immediate Post-War Theories, Predictions, and Evidence 1849
20.3. Experience and New Theory from the 1980s Onward 1852
20.4. Economic Crisis and Income Distribution 1858
20.5. Globalization and Gender Inequality 1862
20.6. Openness and Spatial Inequality 1865
20.7. International Migration, Remittances, and Inequality 1869
20.8. National and Global Policy Responses 1873
20.9. Conclusion 1876
References 1877
PartIV. Policies 1883
21. Democracy, Redistribution, and Inequality 1885
Daron Acemoglu, Suresh Naidu, Pascual Restrepo, James A. Robinson
21.1. Introduction 1886
21.2. Theoretical Considerations 1890
21.3. Previous Literature 1902
21.4. Econometric Specification and Data 1909
21.5. Main Results 1918
21.6. Conclusion 1953
Acknowledgments 1955
Appendix A. Comparison to Rodrik (1999) 1955
Appendix B. Results Using Other Measures of Democracy 1959
References 1960
22. The Idea of Antipoverty Policy 1967
Martin Ravallion
22.1. Introduction 1968
22.2. WealthDynamicsandAntipovertyPolicies 1971
22.3. TheUtilityofPoverty 1974
22.4. TheFirstPovertyEnlightenment 1979
22.5.
TheLongGerminationoftheIdeaofaWorldFreeofPoverty 198422.6. TheSecondPovertyEnlightenment 1994
22.7. TheIdeaofaProgressiveMarketEconomy 2010
22.8. TheFinalBlowtotheIdeaoftheUtilityofPoverty? 2018
22.9. Direct Interventions in Modern Times 2028
22.10. Conclusions 2044
Acknowledgments 2045
Appendix 2045
References 2047
23. The Welfare State and Antipoverty Policy in Rich Countries 2063
Ive Marx, Brian Nolan, Javier Olivera
23.1. Setting the Scene 2064
23.2. Social Protection and Redistribution 2080
23.3. Beyond Social Protection 2108
23.4. The Welfare State, Antipoverty Policy, and the Economic Crisis of the Late 2000s 2120
23.5. Future Research Directions 2126
Acknowledgments 2128
References 2128
24. MicrosimulationandPolicyAnalysis 2141
Francesco Figari, Alari Paulus, Holly Sutherland
24.1. Introduction and Overview 2142
24.2. What Does Microsimulation Add to Analysis of Income Distribution and
Redistribution? 2150
24.3. The Effects of Policy Changes on Income Distribution 2158
24.4. Challenges and Limitations 2182
24.5. Broadening the Scope 2192
24.6. Conclusions and Outlook for the Future 2200
Acknowledgments 2205
Appendix A. Increasing UK Child Benefit in 2001 and 2013: The Net Effects 2205
Appendix B. Comparison of Simulated Estimates of Income Tax with Administrative
Statistics, UK 2010-2011 2207
References 2210
Index
2223