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Determinants of household earnings inequality: the role of labour market trends and changing household structure

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Chen, Wen Hao ; Förster, Michael F. ; Llena-Nozal, Ana

Luxembourg Income Study

LIS - Luxembourg

2013

39 p.

income distribution ; labour supply ; wage differential ; women

USA

Working Paper

591

Income distribution

http://www.lisdatacenter.org/

English

Bibliogr.

"This article assesses various underlying driving factors for the evolution of household earnings inequality or 23 OECD countries from the mid-1980s to the mid-2000s. There are a number of factors at play. Some are related to labour market trends – increasing dispersion of individual wages and changes in men's and women's employment rates. Others relate to shifts in household structures and family formation – more single-headed households and increased earnings correlation among partners in couples. The contribution of each of these factors is estimated using a semi parametric decomposition technique. The results reveal that marital sorting and household structure changes contributed, albeit moderately, to increasing household earnings inequality, while rising women's employment exerted a sizable equalising effect. However, changes in labour market factors, in particular increases in men's earnings disparities, were identified as the main driver of household earnings inequality, contributing between one-third and one-half to the overall increase in most countries. Sensitivity analysis applying a reversed-order decomposition suggests that these results are robust."

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