Inequality in Living Standards Since 1980
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85 pages
English

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Studies of wage and income inequality among U.S. citizens over the past thirty years have engendered the common wisdom that the rich are getting richer and the poor are getting poorer. But is it really that simple? In this meticulous economic study, Orazio P. Attanasio, Erich Battistin, and Mario Padula contend that the evolution of income and wage inequalities offers only a partial picture of changes in prosperity in recent decades. Studying changes in the distribution of consumption and expenditure helps to amplify this picture_income, after all, is valued in large part because it allows consumption_and yields a more complete understanding of economic well-being in America.

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Date de parution 16 novembre 2010
Nombre de lectures 0
EAN13 9780844743721
Langue English

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Inequality in Living Standards since 1980
Inequality in Living Standards since 1980:
Income Tells Only a Small Part of the Story
Orazio P. Attanasio, Erich Battistin, and Mario Padula
The AEI Press

WASHINGTON, D.C.
Distributed by arrangement with the Rowman & Littlefield Publishing Group, 4501 Forbes Boulevard, Suite 200, Lanham, Maryland 20706. To order, call toll free 1-800-462-6420 or 1-717-794-3800. For all other inquiries, please contact AEI Press, 1150 Seventeenth Street, N.W., Washington, D.C. 20036, or call 1-800-862-5801.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Attanasio, Orazio P. Inequality in living standards since 1980: income tells only a small part of the story / Orazio P. Attanasio, Erich Battistin, and Mario Padula. p. cm. Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN-13: 978-0-8447-4366-0 (cloth) ISBN-10: 0-8447-4366-6 (cloth) ISBN-13: 978-0-8447-4368-4 (pbk.) ISBN-10: 0-8447-4368-2 (pbk.) (etc.) 1. Cost and standard of living—United States. 2. Income distribution — United States. 3. Consumption (Economics) — United States. I. Battistin, E. (Erich) II. Padula, Mario. III. Title.
HD6983.A88 2010 339.4'20973—dc22
2010027299
© 2011 by the American Enterprise Institute for Public Policy Research, Washington, D.C. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without permission in writing from the American Enterprise Institute except in the case of brief quotations embodied in news articles, critical articles, or reviews. The views expressed in the publications of the American Enterprise Institute are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of the staff, advisory panels, officers, or trustees of AEI.
Printed in the United States of America

Acknowledgments
We would like to thank the audience at the AEI presentation of a first draft in September 2007 and in particular Steven Davis for much useful feedback.
Foreword
Nicholas Eberstadt
Economics is the study of welfare maximization under resource constraints. For the better part of the past two centuries, economic analysts have investigated patterns of household and individual well-being—and the strategies households and individuals devise to maximize their well-being under resource constraints—through the conjoint study of a household’s income and its consumption (with the latter typically proxied by expenditures).
The milestones in this intellectual effort are well known. In the nineteenth century, for example, German economist and statistician Ernst Engel famously demonstrated that Belgian households with higher income levels allocated a progressively lower proportion of their overall income to expenditures on food and nutrition: thus his “Engel coefficient” (the share of food expenditures within a household’s overall budget) provides an indication of household living standards that is still used today.
In the twentieth century, pioneering work by Nobel Laureates Milton Friedman (with his “permanent income” hypothesis), Franco Modigliani (the “life cycle income” theory), and others persuasively established that consumer expenditures at any given point in time were dependent upon a household’s expectations about their income prospects in years ahead, and not just their immediate income inflows. A household’s annual level of consumption, in other words, could exceed its annual income level for entirely rational, welfare-maximizing reasons, if that household were planning for the long run. Reliance on income data or consumption data alone, these theories emphasized, could provide a highly misleading impression of a household’s self-assessed well-being, as well as its actual living standards: joint analysis of income and consumption patterns would be necessary for a more reliable picture of these dynamics.
Despite these crucial insights, the study of household well-being in the United States—and by extension, the study of livings standards, poverty, and economic inequality in America—has become increasingly “one-sided” over the past several generations. Instead of jointly examining household income and consumption patterns, scholars and researchers have typically focused on income trends alone. (There are exceptions to this generalization, to be sure, but they are just that: exceptions.)
The explanation for this tendency to study America’s income patterns in detail while neglecting or even ignoring the country’s attendant patterns of household consumption in large part has to do with what might be called “data opportunism.” Simply put, work in this field has been strongly influenced by the brute fact that modern America has an abundance of relatively high-quality data sources that provide great detail about U.S household income patterns, while offering little or no corresponding information on consumption patterns. First and foremost among such sources is the U.S. Census Bureau’s Current Population Survey (CPS). This database—the one most commonly used today for the analysis of trends on living standards, poverty, and inequality in contemporary America—makes no effort to represent the expenditure patterns for the families and individuals it surveys.
Conversely, contemporary U.S. data sources that attempt to track household patterns of consumption and expenditures are commonly regarded by specialists as problematic in a number of technical respects. The most important database on U.S. household consumption patterns is the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics’ Consumer Expenditure Survey (CEX)—but for most of the twentieth century this survey was conducted episodically, roughly only once each decade, and was used primarily for adjusting the weights of the basket of goods used to calculate the Consumer Price Index. For the past quarter of a century, the CEX has been conducted annually, and it gathers detailed household data on both income (more specifically, wages and earnings) and consumption (meaning here the breakdown of expenditures on both durable and nondurable goods). But the CEX data on income are widely regarded as spotty and incomplete, an impression reinforced by the Bureau of Labor Statistics itself, which still cautions against the use of CEX data for analysis of U.S. household income trends.
In economics, public policy, and the allied social sciences, research strategies are naturally conditioned by data availability. The perceived abundance of U.S. data on household income, along with the widely held perception that contemporary U.S. data on household expenditures are more sparse and difficult to use, seems to have contributed to a curious intellectual fashion among contemporary labor economists, poverty analysts, and others: namely, that it should be entirely acceptable to describe current U.S. trends in living standards, poverty, and inequality by reference to income data alone, without recourse to data on actual patterns of household consumption or expenditures. This assumption is seldom stated explicitly, yet it is pervasive, perhaps predominant, within the literature. This is so even though we know that reliance on income data in the absence of corresponding household consumption and expenditure data can only result in a much less nuanced assessment of actual household conditions—and quite possibly, in skewed or even positively misleading assessments.
This is the present conundrum of research on poverty and inequality in modern America. Fortunately, in the following monograph, intellectual allies from the other side of the Atlantic take a major step toward resolving it. In the following pages, European scholars Orazio P. Attanasio, Erich Battistin, and Mario Padula provide an original and important analysis of CEX survey data, using ingenious and sophisticated quantitative methods. They demonstrate, to begin, that CPS and CEX data on household income (wages and earnings) in fact conform closely, with CEX trends and levels on household income corresponding remarkably well to results derived from the CPS survey for the period 1982–2003. In so doing, they establish that the CEX can indeed be regarded as a reliable source for levels and trends in American household income (to the extent, that is, that the CPS itself is a reliable source for discerning such trends today—an important but somewhat different issue). Having established the inherent reliability of the CEX data for analysis of U.S. household income trends, they then investigate what the CEX survey can tell us about trends in U.S. living standards and inequality from the consumption perspective.
By jointly analyzing U.S. household trends in income and consumption, Attanasio, Battistin, and Padula uncover at least four findings that require attention from interested scholars and concerned policymakers.
First, while consumption inequality in America does appear to increase during the period under consideration, its increase is much more limited than the increase in income inequality. That is to say, only a fairly small fraction of the increase in income inequality appears to translate directly into an increase in consumption inequality.
Second, the relationship between wage changes and consumption changes for U.S. households appears to become progressively weaker during the years under consideration. Indeed, for the years 1992–2003, changes in wages seem to have almost no influence on changes in household expenditure patterns.
Third, the relationship between current income levels and current consumption levels is weakest for American households at the lowest end of the income distribution (where, in fact, reported spending typically exceeds reported income in any given year).
Fourth and by no means least important, income data and consumption data provide very different perspectives on just who is poor in modern America. Whether one uses earnings or wages as the income criterion, fewer than one third of U.S. households in the bottom income quintile are also in the

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