Accounting for Wealth Inequality Dynamics: Methods, Estimates and Simulations for France (1800–2014). Garbinti, B., Goupille-Lebret, J., & Piketty, T. 2017. Paper File doi abstract bibtex This paper combines different sources and methods (income tax data, inheritance registers, national accounts, wealth surveys) in order to deliver consistent, unified wealth distribution series for France over the 1800-2014 period. We find a large decline of the top 10% wealth share from the 1910s to the 1980s, mostly to the benefit of the middle 40% of the distribution. Since the 1980s-90s, we observe a moderate rise of wealth concentration, with large fluctuations due to asset price movements. In effect, rising inequality in saving rates and rates of return pushes toward rising wealth concentration, in spite of the contradictory effect of housing prices. We develop a simple simulation model highlighting how the combination of unequal saving rates, rates of return and labor earnings leads to large multiplicative effects and high steady-state wealth concentration. Small changes in the key parameters appear to matter a lot for long-run inequality. We discuss the conditions under which rising concentration is likely to continue in the coming decades.
@unpublished{Garbinti.etal_2017_AccountingWealthInequalityDynamicsMethods,
title = {Accounting for Wealth Inequality Dynamics: Methods, Estimates and Simulations for {{France}} (1800\textendash 2014)},
author = {Garbinti, Bertrand and {Goupille-Lebret}, Jonathan and Piketty, Thomas},
year = {2017},
journal = {Banque de France Working Paper},
issn = {1556-5068},
doi = {10.2139/ssrn.2997069},
url = {https://www.ssrn.com/abstract=2997069},
abstract = {This paper combines different sources and methods (income tax data, inheritance registers, national accounts, wealth surveys) in order to deliver consistent, unified wealth distribution series for France over the 1800-2014 period. We find a large decline of the top 10\% wealth share from the 1910s to the 1980s, mostly to the benefit of the middle 40\% of the distribution. Since the 1980s-90s, we observe a moderate rise of wealth concentration, with large fluctuations due to asset price movements. In effect, rising inequality in saving rates and rates of return pushes toward rising wealth concentration, in spite of the contradictory effect of housing prices. We develop a simple simulation model highlighting how the combination of unequal saving rates, rates of return and labor earnings leads to large multiplicative effects and high steady-state wealth concentration. Small changes in the key parameters appear to matter a lot for long-run inequality. We discuss the conditions under which rising concentration is likely to continue in the coming decades.},
keywords = {Data Sources: Wealth Inequality Trends},
url_file = {Garbinti.etal_2017_AccountingWealthInequalityDynamicsMethods.pdf}
}
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