मार्च 29, 2022
लेखक WID.world

Newsletter | March 2022

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Data visualization: Realtime Inequality

 

The impact of the pandemic illustrates how crucial it is to have timely and distributional economic data. To understand better how each income and wealth group benefits from the growth of national income in the US, Thomas Blanchet, Emmanuel Saez and Gabriel Zucman launched Realtime Inequality, the first platform to provide timely statistics on how economic growth is distributed. The online data is updated each quarter, when new growth numbers come out.

Explore the website: //realtimeinequality.org/

 

 

 

 

Note: Effective sanctions against Russian oligarchs

 

Neef, Nicolaides, Chancel, Piketty and Zucman provide data on wealth  Iinequality in Russia and argue for a European Asset Registry, where the  already existing but currently dispersed information could be gathered.  This would change the state of play, resulting in better-targeted sanctions and more effective tools to curb money laundering, corruption and tax evasion.

Read the note: //wid.world/news-article/effective-sanctions-against-oligarchs-and-the-role-of-a-european-asset-registry/ 

 

 

 

Job opening: Data engineer

The WIL is looking for a data engineer to join our central team, based at the  Paris School of Economics. The central team overviews the process of  collecting data from researchers, transforming it to match the equirements of the database, documents and disseminates the results on WID.world.

Have a look at our career page: //inequalitylab.world/en/jobs-6/ 

 

 

 

Selection of working papers

 

In this paper, Guillermo Woo-Mora uses skin tone and income information on more than 100,000 individuals across 31 Latin American countries to study racial inequalities during the last decade. He provides evidence of a skin tone income premium. In an eleven-color palette, each darker shade in skin tone on average leads to a 3% decrease in income, with heterogeneity across countries. The findings suggest that racial discrimination is the main
mechanism behind this income premium.

 

In this paper, Demetrio Guzzardi, Elisa Palagi, Andrea Roventini and Alessandro Santoro reconstruct novel Distributional National Accounts for Italy, combining national and regional survey data, administrative data and national accounts in order to analyze the evolution of income distribution and the overall progressivity of the tax system. These estimates show higher income concentration at the top than is reported in existing studies, and  that the concentration has been growing since 2008.

 

In this paper, Cécile Bonneau and Sébastien Grobon provide new stylized  facts on inequalities in access to higher education by parental income in  France. At the bottom of the income distribution, 35% of individuals have access to higher education compared with 90% at the top of the distribution. The authors document how these inequalities in access to higher education by parental income combine with inequalities linked to parental occupation or degree.

 

In this paper, Theresa Neef and Anne-Sophie Robilliard analyze gender  inequality in labor incomes and explore the following questions: What share do women earn of the labor income of a country, a region, and globally?  How has this share changed since 1990? The inequality indicator, the  women’s labor income share, considers gender differentials in earnings as well as labor force participation and is thus broader than usual measures of gender inequality.

Our library is available here: //wid.world/methodology/#library 

 

 

Next debates on equality

 

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