Erik Bengtsson
Senior lecturer
Capital Shares and Income Inequality: Evidence from the Long Run
Author
Summary, in English
This paper investigates the relationship between the capital share in national income and personal income inequality over the long run. Using a new historical cross-country database on capital shares in 19 countries and data from the World Wealth and Income Database, we find strong long-run links between the aggregate role of capital in the economy and the size distribution of income. Over time, this dependence varies; it was strong both before the Second World War and in the early interwar era, but has grown to its highest levels in the period since 1980. The correlation is particularly strong in Anglo-Saxon and Nordic countries, in the very top of the distribution and when we only consider top capital incomes. Replacing top income shares with a broader measure of inequality (Gini coefficient), the positive relationship remains but becomes somewhat weaker.
Department/s
- Department of Economic History
Publishing year
2016
Language
English
Publication/Series
European Historical Economics Society Working Paper Series
Issue
92
Document type
Working paper
Publisher
European Historical Economics Society
Topic
- Economic History
- Economics
Keywords
- Wage share
- Top incomes
- Inequality
- Wealth
- Economic history
Status
Published