Understanding the trends in income, consumption and wealth inequality and how important are life-cycle effects?
Content
Rising inequality in income, wealth and consumption has received a good deal of public attention
in the past years. At the same time, also macroeconomists are more and more interested in
inequality as they have expanded their models to incorporate heterogeneity in the household
sector. We supply these models with empirical benchmarks for their calibration and contribute to
the understanding of the reasons underlying the trends in inequality. Specifically, we employ a
variance decomposition and estimate life-cycle profiles of inequality in income, consumption and
wealth based on two measures of inequality. We deepen the discussion on wealth inequality by
evaluating the relative importance of savings, portfolio choice and inheritances for the
accumulation of wealth. To do so, we project active and passive savings based on the observed
saving and investment behavior of synthetic cohorts from the German Income and Expenditure
Survey (EVS).
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