April 14, 2017
Written by WID.world

New paper on income inequality dynamics in France

This new paper by B. Garbinti, J. Goupille-Lebret and T. Piketty, “Income Inequality in France 1900-2014: Evidence from Distributional Accounts”, WID.world Working Paper 2017/04, combines national accounts, tax and survey data in a comprehensive and consistent manner to build homogenous annual series on the distribution of national income by percentiles over the 1900-2014 period, with detailed breakdown by age, gender and income categories over the 1970-2014 period.

HIGHLIGHTS. Growth incidence curves look dramatically different for the 1950-1983 and 1983-2014 sub-periods. During the 1950-1983 period, per adult real income rose at almost 4% per year for most of the population, except for very top percentiles, whose incomes grew at about 1.5% per year. Between 1983 and 2014, we observe the opposite pattern: for most of the population real growth rates were about 1-1.5% per year or less, except for very top percentiles, who enjoyed real growth rates up to 3% per year.

Appendix available here. Detailed data files and computer codes available here. Presentation slides can be accessed there.

See also our companion paper B. Garbinti, J. Goupille-Lebret, T. Piketty, “Accounting for Wealth Inequality Dynamics: Methods, Estimates and Simulations for France (1800-2014)”, WID.world Working Paper 2016/5.

Appendix available here. Detailed data files and computer codes available here. Presentation slides can be accessed there.