Publication | Open Access
The Dynamics of Inequality
321
Citations
51
References
2016
Year
Social InequalityEconomicsDynamic EquilibriumEconomic GrowthPopulation InequalityPareto TailBusinessEconomic AnalysisEconomic FluctuationEndogenous Growth TheoryIncome DistributionVariational InequalityTop Income InequalityEconomic InequalityUnited StatesDynamic Economics
The past forty years have seen a rapid rise in top income inequality in the United States. While there is a large number of existing theories of the Pareto tail of the long-run income distributions, almost none of these address the fast rise in top inequality observed in the data. We show that standard theories, which build on a random growth mechanism, generate transition dynamics that are too slow relative to those observed in the data. We then suggest two parsimonious deviations from the canonical model that can explain such changes: “scale dependence” that may arise from changes in skill prices, and “type dependence,” that is, the presence of some “high-growth types.” These deviations are consistent with theories in which the increase in top income inequality is driven by the rise of “superstar” entrepreneurs or managers.
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