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Distributional National Accounts: A Macro-Micro Approach to Inequality in Germany

Stefan Bach, Charlotte Bartels, Theresa Neef


This chapter is a preliminary draft unless otherwise noted. It may not have been subjected to the formal review process of the NBER. This page will be updated as the chapter is revised.

Chapter in forthcoming NBER book Measuring Distribution and Mobility of Income and Wealth, Raj Chetty, John N. Friedman, Janet C. Gornick, Barry Johnson, and Arthur Kennickell, editors
Conference held March 5-6, 2020
Forthcoming from University of Chicago Press
in NBER Book Series Studies in Income and Wealth

This project aims to provide new income inequality series for reunified Germany combining tax data, survey data, and national accounts. Estimating Distributional National Accounts (DINA), we capture 100% of national income and can compute the distribution of pretax and posttax incomes for the entire adult population. This allows us to answer the following questions: Who has benefited more from economic growth: employees or capital owners? The bottom 50%, the middle class or the top 10%, 1% and 0.1% of earners? Further, our paper is the first to apply the DINA methodology to the analysis of regional disparities. 30 years after the German reunification, substantial income differences remain between those living in East and West Germany. In the 1990s, West German investors bought real estate and factories in East Germany, following favourable tax incentives. We investigate to what extent capital income generated in East Germany flowing to West German capital owners can explain structural differences between the income distributions in East and West Germany.

This paper is available as PDF (1231 K) or via email

Machine-readable bibliographic record - MARC, RIS, BibTeX

 
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