Inequality and Crises Revisited. Morelli, S. & Atkinson, A. B. Economia Politica, 32(1):31–51, Springer International Publishing, 2015. Link doi abstract bibtex 1 download Recent debate has suggested that growing levels or high levels of inequality may be systematically associated with the occurrence of banking crises. Using the updated version of the Chartbook of Economic Inequality, this paper provides new empirical evidence on the 'level' hypothesis and reassesses the empirical validity of the 'growth' hypothesis. In line with previous work, the empirical analysis on the entire set of countries and years under investigation does not provide any conclusive and compelling statistical support to either of the hypotheses. However, the apparent statistical insignificance of the findings does not rule out the economic relevance of the question at hand, given that the hypotheses cannot be rejected for important crises and countries such as the US and the UK. Hence, the overall evidence is far from being conclusive and there are several reasons to shed further light on this important research topic.
@article{MorelliAtkinson2015,
title = {Inequality and Crises Revisited},
author = {Morelli, Salvatore and Atkinson, A. B.},
year = {2015},
journal = {Economia Politica},
volume = {32},
number = {1},
pages = {31--51},
publisher = {{Springer International Publishing}},
doi = {10.1007/s40888-015-0006-y},
url = {https://doi.org/10.1007/s40888-015-0006-y},
abstract = {Recent debate has suggested that growing levels or high levels of inequality may be systematically associated with the occurrence of banking crises. Using the updated version of the Chartbook of Economic Inequality, this paper provides new empirical evidence on the 'level' hypothesis and reassesses the empirical validity of the 'growth' hypothesis. In line with previous work, the empirical analysis on the entire set of countries and years under investigation does not provide any conclusive and compelling statistical support to either of the hypotheses. However, the apparent statistical insignificance of the findings does not rule out the economic relevance of the question at hand, given that the hypotheses cannot be rejected for important crises and countries such as the US and the UK. Hence, the overall evidence is far from being conclusive and there are several reasons to shed further light on this important research topic.},
keywords = {Determinants of Wealth and Wealth Inequality,Impacts of Wealth Inequality}
}
Downloads: 1
{"_id":"Ytr3ZMBozYzQht2TR","bibbaseid":"morelli-atkinson-inequalityandcrisesrevisited-2015","authorIDs":[],"author_short":["Morelli, S.","Atkinson, A. B."],"bibdata":{"bibtype":"article","type":"article","title":"Inequality and Crises Revisited","author":[{"propositions":[],"lastnames":["Morelli"],"firstnames":["Salvatore"],"suffixes":[]},{"propositions":[],"lastnames":["Atkinson"],"firstnames":["A.","B."],"suffixes":[]}],"year":"2015","journal":"Economia Politica","volume":"32","number":"1","pages":"31–51","publisher":"Springer International Publishing","doi":"10.1007/s40888-015-0006-y","url":"https://doi.org/10.1007/s40888-015-0006-y","abstract":"Recent debate has suggested that growing levels or high levels of inequality may be systematically associated with the occurrence of banking crises. Using the updated version of the Chartbook of Economic Inequality, this paper provides new empirical evidence on the 'level' hypothesis and reassesses the empirical validity of the 'growth' hypothesis. In line with previous work, the empirical analysis on the entire set of countries and years under investigation does not provide any conclusive and compelling statistical support to either of the hypotheses. However, the apparent statistical insignificance of the findings does not rule out the economic relevance of the question at hand, given that the hypotheses cannot be rejected for important crises and countries such as the US and the UK. Hence, the overall evidence is far from being conclusive and there are several reasons to shed further light on this important research topic.","keywords":"Determinants of Wealth and Wealth Inequality,Impacts of Wealth Inequality","bibtex":"@article{MorelliAtkinson2015,\n title = {Inequality and Crises Revisited},\n author = {Morelli, Salvatore and Atkinson, A. B.},\n year = {2015},\n journal = {Economia Politica},\n volume = {32},\n number = {1},\n pages = {31--51},\n publisher = {{Springer International Publishing}},\n doi = {10.1007/s40888-015-0006-y},\n url = {https://doi.org/10.1007/s40888-015-0006-y},\n abstract = {Recent debate has suggested that growing levels or high levels of inequality may be systematically associated with the occurrence of banking crises. Using the updated version of the Chartbook of Economic Inequality, this paper provides new empirical evidence on the 'level' hypothesis and reassesses the empirical validity of the 'growth' hypothesis. In line with previous work, the empirical analysis on the entire set of countries and years under investigation does not provide any conclusive and compelling statistical support to either of the hypotheses. However, the apparent statistical insignificance of the findings does not rule out the economic relevance of the question at hand, given that the hypotheses cannot be rejected for important crises and countries such as the US and the UK. Hence, the overall evidence is far from being conclusive and there are several reasons to shed further light on this important research topic.},\n keywords = {Determinants of Wealth and Wealth Inequality,Impacts of Wealth Inequality}\n}\n\n","author_short":["Morelli, S.","Atkinson, A. B."],"key":"MorelliAtkinson2015","id":"MorelliAtkinson2015","bibbaseid":"morelli-atkinson-inequalityandcrisesrevisited-2015","role":"author","urls":{"link":"https://doi.org/10.1007/s40888-015-0006-y"},"keyword":["Determinants of Wealth and Wealth Inequality","Impacts of Wealth Inequality"],"metadata":{"authorlinks":{}},"downloads":1},"bibtype":"article","creationDate":"2019-08-02T01:04:32.302Z","downloads":1,"keywords":["determinants of wealth and wealth inequality","impacts of wealth inequality"],"search_terms":["inequality","crises","revisited","morelli","atkinson"],"title":"Inequality and Crises Revisited","year":2015,"biburl":"https://bibbase.org/f/nKAPSyp34A9azBzJd/GCWealthProject_WealthResearchLibrary.bib","dataSources":["QFH3S2ktnk2HEGP7y","ya2CyA73rpZseyrZ8","fBJx9xgrqvHd4JSiH","BLCNacxsmPCKKSNFN","zMnvgM8QBubpA78Tj","9uEoHFf8tixGaNsrJ","AGpZutMrvkWJwNxBH","Ehs2RwEzf4bZfKzK4","26owrmKAvXfuHsKRp","xHckFvXLsDnHhFkXn","cJJHdqh9t5tR5wpLH","F3pGsndC3BMm5kzaE","t77TCZsnrGgyo6dsY","BCPeddFnrLq82SA2k","2w2tCMfz9tagnuYcn","grHFPbjkekLtP8Rd5","reZhxJTZLXbC6Xb4R","CievPB5mG8TuzbbZ3","XqKxryftLF3GWq6cY","M7of5cge3GPiYqZve","PZFBspX8PwJz5LKpx","ve96mwrzCBBzfBff6","zu77p3c7mn9doiv7C","rGyABhQGe9pcQ9R2W","7X2xHQTrKka5yPvuD","gktz2DotJNwWxzBjM","s55XALJsj7pSgkAJ5","6TRStm8krC6i2nGYe","yda7rYQnmKoN94xAr","hHZFQp7q53h3BYKe8"]}