Understanding Rising Concentration at the Extremes of the U.S. Income Distribution

How Important Are Income Fluctuations Among the Very Richest Households?

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.25071/1874-6322.40475

Keywords:

Inequality, Top Incomes, Concentration, Income Distribution

Abstract

We explore the importance of income fluctuations at the top of the U.S. income distribution in understanding rising income concentration. Very high income families—including the top .001 percent—account for much of the recent top income growth, but are under-studied even in the literature exploring high-income groups. Using 3-year panels of tax records from 1997 to 2013 we document that top-income shares are lower—typically by about 20 percent—when measured by using a three-year income average, and that cyclical income fluctuations are greatest at the very top of the income distribution. Trends toward rising concentration over time, however, cannot be explained by these fluctuations, as growth in top-income shares is comparable for annual and three-year average income, and measured income dispersion has increased only for the very top group. Further, the probability of remaining in the highest income groups over multiple years increased over the sample period.

References

Alvaredo, Facundo, Anthony Atkinson, Lucas Chancel, Thomas Piketty, Emmanuel Saez, and Gabriel Zucman 2016 “Distributional National Accounts (DINA) Guidelines: Concepts and Methods used in WID.world”, WID.world Working Papers 201602, World Inequality Lab (1).

Auten, Gerald, Geoffrey Gee, and Nicholas Turner 2013 “New Perspectives on Income Mobility and Inequality”, National Tax Journal 66(4): 893-912.

—–, and David Splinter 2020 “Income Inequality in the United States: Using Tax Data to Measure Long-Term Trends” Unpublished mimeo.

—–, David Splinter and Susan Nelson 2016 “Reactions of High-Income Taxpayers to Major Tax Legislation”, National Tax Journal 69(4): 935-964.

Bakija, Jon, Adam Cole, and Bradley Heim 2012 “Jobs and Income Growth of Top Earners and the Causes of Changing Income Inequality: Evidence from US Tax Return Data”, Department of Economics Working Papers 2010-22, Williams College. [Unpublished manuscript]

Bebchuk, Lucian and Jesse Fried 2003 “Executive Compensation as an Agency Problem”, Journal of Economic Perspectives 17(3): 71-92.

—– and Yaniv Grinstein 2005 “The Growth of Executive Pay”, Oxford Review of Economic Policy 21(2): 283-303.

Berman, Yonatan 2018 “The Long Run Evolution of Absolute Intergenerational Mobility” Mimeo.

Bivens, Josh and Lawrence Mishel 2013 “The Pay of Corporate Executives and Financial Professionals as Evidence of Rents in Top 1 per cent Incomes”, Journal of Economic Perspectives 27 (3): 57-78.

Bjorklund, Anders 1993 “A Comparison between Actual Distributions of Annual and Lifetime Income: Sweden 1951-1989”, The Review of Income and Wealth 39(4): 377-386.

Bloom, Nicholas, Fatih Guvenen, Luigi Pistaferri, John Sabelhaus, Sergio Salgado, and Jae Song 2017 “The Great Micro Moderation” Working Paper.

Brady, David, Marco Giesselmann, Ulrich Kohler, and Anke Radenacker 2018 “How to measure and proxy permanent income: evidence from Germany and the U.S.”, Journal of Economic Inequality, 16: 321-345.

Bricker, Jesse, Alice Henriques, Jacob Krimmel, and John Sabelhaus 2016 “Measuring Income and Wealth at the Top Using Administrative and Survey Data”, Brookings Papers on Economic Activity 261-321.

—–, Lisa J. Dettling, Alice Henriques, Joanne W. Hsu, Lindsay Jacobs, Kevin B. Moore, Sarah Pack, John Sabelhaus, Jeffrey Thompson, and Richard A. Windle 2017 “Changes in U.S. Family Finances from 2013 to 2016: Evidence from the Survey of Consumer Finances”, Federal Reserve Bulletin 103(3).

Carrieri, Vincenzo, Francesco Principe, and Michele Raitano 2018 “What makes you ‘super-rich’? New evidence from an analysis of football players’ wages”, Oxford Economic Papers 70(4): 950-973.

DeBacker, Jason, Bradley Heim, Vasia Panousi, Shanthi Ramnath, and Ivan Vidangos 2013 “Rising Inequality: Transitory or Persistent? New Evidence from a Panel of US Tax Returns”, Brookings Papers on Economic Activity(1): 67-142.

Dowd, Timothy, Robert McClelland and Jacob A. Mortenson 2019 “Investor Responsiveness to Capital Gains Taxes During the Great Recession” Urban-Brookings Tax Policy Center Research Report.

Dynan, Karen, Douglas Elmendorf and Daniel Sichel 2012 “The Evolution of Household Income Volatility”, The B.E. Journal of Economic Analysis and Policy: Advances 12(2).

Fennell, Lee Anne 2012 “Lumpy Property” John M. Olin Program in Law and Economics Working Paper No. 585

Fisher, Jonathan, David Johnson, Timothy Smeeding, and Jeffrey Thompson 2016 “Inequality in 3-D: Income, Consumption, and Wealth” Washington Center for Equitable Growth Working Paper 2016-09.

Gottschalk, Peter and Robert Moffitt 1994 “The Growth of Earnings Instability in the U.S. Labor Market”, Brookings Papers on Economic Activity 1994(2): 217-27.

Guvenen, Faith, Greg Kaplan, and Jae Song 2014 “How Risky are Recessions for Top Earners?”, The American Economic Review 104(5): 148-153.

—–, Fatih Karahan, Serdar Ozkan, and Jae Song 2015 “What Do Data on Millions of U.S. Workers Reveal About Life-Cycle Earnings Dynamics?” NBER Working Paper 20913.

Haider, Steven and Gary Solon 2006 “Life-cycle Variation in the Association between Current and Lifetime Earnings”, The American Economic Review 96(4): 1308-1320.

Hardy, Bradley and James Ziliak 2014 “Decomposing Trends in Income Volatility: The ‘Wild Ride’ at the Top and Bottom”, Economic Inquiry 52(1): 459-476.

Jensen, Shane and Stephen Shore 2015 “Changes in the distribution of income volatility”, Journal of Human Resources 50(3): 811-836.

Jones, Charles and Jihee Kim 2018 “A Schumpeterian Model of Top Income Inequality”, The Journal of Political Economy 125(5): 1785-1826.

Kaplan, Steven and Joshua Rauh 2013 “It’s the Market: The Broad-Based Rise in the Return to Top Talent”, Journal of Economic Perspectives 27(3): 35-56.

Kopczuk, Wojciech, Emmanuel Saez, and Jae Song 2010 “Earnings Inequality and Mobility in the United States: Evidence from Social Security Data Since 1937”, Quarterly Journal of Economics 125: 91-128.

Levy, Frank and Peter Temin 2007 “Inequality and Institutions in 20th Century America” National Bureau of Economic Research Working Paper #13106.

Lillard, Lee 1977 “Inequality: Earnings Vs. Human Wealth”, The American Economic Review 67(2): 42-53.

Parker, Jonathan and Annette Vissing-Jorgensen 2009 “Who Bears Aggregate Fluctuations and How?”, American Economic Review: Papers & Proceedings 99(2): 399-405.

—– 2010 “The Increase in Income Cyclicality of High-Income Households and Its Relation to the Rise in Top Income Shares”, Brookings Papers on Economic Activity 1-70.

Piketty, Thomas and Emmanuel Saez 2003 “Income Inequality in the United States, 1913-1998”, The Quarterly Journal of Economics 118(1): 1-39.

—– 2006 “The Evolution of Top Incomes: A Historical and International Perspective”, American Economic Review 96(2): 200-206.

—– and Gabriel Zucman 2018 “Distributional National Accounts: Methods and Estimates for the United States”, Quarterly Journal of Economics 133(2): 553-609.

Roine, Jesper and Daniel Waldenström 2012 “On the Role of Capital Gains in Swedish Income Inequality”, Review of Income and Wealth 58(3): 569-587.

Rosen, Sherwin 1981 “Economics of superstars”, American Economic Review 71: 34-183

Sabelhaus, John and Jae Song 2010 “The Great Moderation in Micro Labor Earnings”, Journal of Monetary Economics 57: 391-403.

Saez, Emmanuel and Gabriel Zucman 2019 “Progressive Wealth Taxation”, Brookings Papers on Economic Activity Fall: 1-60.

Splinter, David 2021 “Income Mobility and Inequality: Adult-Level Measures from U.S. Tax Data since 1979”, Review of Income and Wealth https://doi.org/10.1111/roiw.12501.

Published

2021-03-30

How to Cite

Thompson, J., Bricker, J., & Parisi, M. (2021). Understanding Rising Concentration at the Extremes of the U.S. Income Distribution: How Important Are Income Fluctuations Among the Very Richest Households?. Journal of Income Distribution®, 30(1). https://doi.org/10.25071/1874-6322.40475

Issue

Section

Articles

Similar Articles

<< < 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 > >> 

You may also start an advanced similarity search for this article.