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Explore income distribution, Gini coefficient, tax effects, labor markets, and skills premium to understand implications of inequality on living standards. Discover institutional factors impacting income disparities.
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Inequality and Living Standards Andrew Shephard andrew_s@ifs.org.uk
Motivation • Why do we care about inequality or poverty? • How do we measure living standards? • Will focus on income as main measure • Alternatives?
Income • Gross or net income? • Whose income? • Consider household income. • Housing Costs? • Consider both BHC and AHC income. • Different needs? • Equivalisation of income
Income equivalisation • McClements Scale (1977) • Compare all incomes to a childless couple • Complete resource pooling • Income needed to attain same living standard as childless couple on £20,000. • Single person, £12,200 (61%). • Lone parent with child aged 8, £16,800 (84%). • Three students sharing house, £29,800 (149%).
McClements Equivalence Scale • Add up the different contributions to calculate the scale: • childless couple • 0.61 + 0.39 = 1 • lone parent (child aged 8) • 0.61 + 0.23 = 0.84
The Income Distribution 2001/02 • Features of distribution • Distribution is highly skewed • Around two-thirds of individuals have incomes below mean • Long tail: 2% of individuals have incomes above three times the average • Where do you fit in? • www.ifs.org.uk/wheredoyoufitin
The Gini Coefficient • Bounded between zero (complete equality) and one (complete inequality). • Treats deviations from equality the same regardless of where the occur within income distribution. • Typically between 0.25 and 0.35 for developed countries.
Inequality under Labour • Since Labour came to power inequality on this measure has continued to increase. • And since 1998/99, (BHC income) inequality is higher than at any point since 1961. • Increase in inequality has occurred despite redistribution of Government. • Examine entire distribution to see how income growth varies.
Effect of tax and benefit reforms • What effect have recent tax and benefit changes had on inequality? • Consider what would have happened to incomes had the tax and benefit remained unchanged. • Use simulation techniques to calculate income series under uprated April 1996 system.
Simulated and Actual Gini • In 2000/01 and 2001/02 there is a departure between the actual Gini and that simulated under April 96 system. • Tax and benefit changes therefore worked to reduce extent of inequality. • Suggests the underlying distribution has become more unequal.
The Labour Market • Earnings inequality • Remain the most important source of income • Also has implication for future income (pensions) • Understanding the labour market is essential • Over the 1980s and 1990s the skills premium (ratio of skilled to unskilled wage) has increased. • Occurred at the same time relative supply of skilled labour has increased
The Skills Premium • Stolper-Samuelson Theorem • Increased trade with LDCs has increased the skills premium. • Problems • No evidence that premium has been reduced in LDCs. • Relative price of skilled vs unskilled intensive goods unchanged. • Is trade with LDCs important enough? • Alternative: Skills biased technological change • Technological advanced biased in favour of more highly skilled workers.
Changing Participation • Decrease in male participation mainly in households where there are no other workers. • Increased female participation among those with working partner. • Leads to increased polarisation between two-earner and no-earner households. • But no earner households decreased in recent years.
Other Institutional Factors • Wages policies and Wages Councils abolished • Equal pay act • Decline in role of trade unions • National Minimum Wage