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What shapes the U.S. wealth distribution?
Longevity vs income inequality
Krzysztof Makarski (FAME|GRAPE and Warsaw School of Economics)
Joanna Tyrowicz (FAME|GRAPE, University of Regensburg, and IZA)
Piotr Zoch (FAME|GRAPE, University of Warsaw)
EPCS, Vienna, 2024
1 / 25
Motivation
Unprecedented rise in wealth inequality in the US
2 / 25
The existing explanations
Explanation 1 | Rising income inequality
Gabaix et al. (2016), Chetty et al. (2017), Guvenen et al. (2021, 2022)
which leads to a rise in wealth inequality
Saez i Zucman (2016), Piketty et al. (2018), Gibson-Davis i Hill (2021), Black et al (2022)
3 / 25
The existing explanations
Explanation 1 | Rising income inequality
Gabaix et al. (2016), Chetty et al. (2017), Guvenen et al. (2021, 2022)
which leads to a rise in wealth inequality
Saez i Zucman (2016), Piketty et al. (2018), Gibson-Davis i Hill (2021), Black et al (2022)
Explanation 2 | Insufficient redistributon
Krussell, Smith and Hubmer (2020)
3 / 25
The existing explanations
Explanation 1 | Rising income inequality
Gabaix et al. (2016), Chetty et al. (2017), Guvenen et al. (2021, 2022)
which leads to a rise in wealth inequality
Saez i Zucman (2016), Piketty et al. (2018), Gibson-Davis i Hill (2021), Black et al (2022)
Explanation 2 | Insufficient redistributon
Krussell, Smith and Hubmer (2020)
Observation | Longevity rises
3 / 25
The existing explanations
Explanation 1 | Rising income inequality
Gabaix et al. (2016), Chetty et al. (2017), Guvenen et al. (2021, 2022)
which leads to a rise in wealth inequality
Saez i Zucman (2016), Piketty et al. (2018), Gibson-Davis i Hill (2021), Black et al (2022)
Explanation 2 | Insufficient redistributon
Krussel, Smith and Hubmer (2020)
Observation | Longevity rises having important economic implications:
1. incentives for old-age saving ↑
2. discrepancy between young and around-retirement ↑
3. share of population near retirement ↑
4 / 25
The existing explanations
Explanation 1 | Rising income inequality
Gabaix et al. (2016), Chetty et al. (2017), Guvenen et al. (2021, 2022)
which leads to a rise in wealth inequality
Saez i Zucman (2016), Piketty et al. (2018), Gibson-Davis i Hill (2021), Black et al (2022)
Explanation 2 | Insufficient redistributon
Krussel, Smith and Hubmer (2020)
Observation | Longevity rises having important economic implications:
1. incentives for old-age saving ↑
2. discrepancy between young and around-retirement ↑
3. share of population near retirement ↑
Our aim: study the role of longevity rise for wealth inequality in the US (1960-2020)
4 / 25
Contribution
Our model has a lot of data driven moving parts:
1. OLG - accounting for rise in longevity
5 / 25
Contribution
Our model has a lot of data driven moving parts:
1. OLG - accounting for rise in longevity
2. Drivers of change in the economy
5 / 25
Contribution
Our model has a lot of data driven moving parts:
1. OLG - accounting for rise in longevity
2. Drivers of change in the economy
• income inequality:
5 / 25
Contribution
Our model has a lot of data driven moving parts:
1. OLG - accounting for rise in longevity
2. Drivers of change in the economy
• income inequality:
• labor share
5 / 25
Contribution
Our model has a lot of data driven moving parts:
1. OLG - accounting for rise in longevity
2. Drivers of change in the economy
• income inequality:
• labor share
• college premium & share of college-educated
5 / 25
Contribution
Our model has a lot of data driven moving parts:
1. OLG - accounting for rise in longevity
2. Drivers of change in the economy
• income inequality:
• labor share
• college premium & share of college-educated
• income shocks vary across birth cohorts
5 / 25
Contribution
Our model has a lot of data driven moving parts:
1. OLG - accounting for rise in longevity
2. Drivers of change in the economy
• income inequality:
• labor share
• college premium & share of college-educated
• income shocks vary across birth cohorts
• tax policies:
5 / 25
Contribution
Our model has a lot of data driven moving parts:
1. OLG - accounting for rise in longevity
2. Drivers of change in the economy
• income inequality:
• labor share
• college premium & share of college-educated
• income shocks vary across birth cohorts
• tax policies:
• tax rates & progression
5 / 25
Contribution
Our model has a lot of data driven moving parts:
1. OLG - accounting for rise in longevity
2. Drivers of change in the economy
• income inequality:
• labor share
• college premium & share of college-educated
• income shocks vary across birth cohorts
• tax policies:
• tax rates & progression
• government expenditure & debt/GDP ratio
5 / 25
Contribution
Our model has a lot of data driven moving parts:
1. OLG - accounting for rise in longevity
2. Drivers of change in the economy
• income inequality:
• labor share
• college premium & share of college-educated
• income shocks vary across birth cohorts
• tax policies:
• tax rates & progression
• government expenditure & debt/GDP ratio
3. We put that all into play in general equilibrium
5 / 25
Contribution
Our model has a lot of data driven moving parts:
1. OLG - accounting for rise in longevity
2. Drivers of change in the economy
• income inequality:
• labor share
• college premium & share of college-educated
• income shocks vary across birth cohorts
• tax policies:
• tax rates & progression
• government expenditure & debt/GDP ratio
3. We put that all into play in general equilibrium
5 / 25
Contribution
Our model has a lot of data driven moving parts:
1. OLG - accounting for rise in longevity
2. Drivers of change in the economy
• income inequality:
• labor share
• college premium & share of college-educated
• income shocks vary across birth cohorts
• tax policies:
• tax rates & progression
• government expenditure & debt/GDP ratio
3. We put that all into play in general equilibrium
In simulations we “switch off” specific channels of change
5 / 25
The Model
The model
The consumer
• CRRA utility, idiosyncratic shocks to discount rate δi,j,s,t
6 / 25
The model
The consumer
• CRRA utility, idiosyncratic shocks to discount rate δi,j,s,t
6 / 25
The model
The consumer
• CRRA utility, idiosyncratic shocks to discount rate δi,j,s,t
• ex ante heterogeneity (shares s(t): college and less than college)
6 / 25
The model
The consumer
• CRRA utility, idiosyncratic shocks to discount rate δi,j,s,t
• ex ante heterogeneity (shares s(t): college and less than college)
• lifetime uncertainty: lives for up to 16 periods with πj,t < 1 (specific to education) & no annuity
6 / 25
The model
The consumer
• CRRA utility, idiosyncratic shocks to discount rate δi,j,s,t
• ex ante heterogeneity (shares s(t): college and less than college)
• lifetime uncertainty: lives for up to 16 periods with πj,t < 1 (specific to education) & no annuity
• idiosyncratic income shocks: wi,j,s,t = wt · ηs,t · ωi,j,s,t.
with ωi,j,s,t given by AR(1) and approximated by Markov chains
6 / 25
The model
The consumer
• CRRA utility, idiosyncratic shocks to discount rate δi,j,s,t
• ex ante heterogeneity (shares s(t): college and less than college)
• lifetime uncertainty: lives for up to 16 periods with πj,t < 1 (specific to education) & no annuity
• idiosyncratic income shocks: wi,j,s,t = wt · ηs,t · ωi,j,s,t.
with ωi,j,s,t given by AR(1) and approximated by Markov chains
• idiosyncratic returns: a common aggregate component ˜
rt determined by the marginal product of
capital and taxes, and an i.i.d. component ϵs,r,t with mean zero (Hubmer et al, 2021)
6 / 25
The model
The consumer
• CRRA utility, idiosyncratic shocks to discount rate δi,j,s,t
• ex ante heterogeneity (shares s(t): college and less than college)
• lifetime uncertainty: lives for up to 16 periods with πj,t < 1 (specific to education) & no annuity
• idiosyncratic income shocks: wi,j,s,t = wt · ηs,t · ωi,j,s,t.
with ωi,j,s,t given by AR(1) and approximated by Markov chains
• idiosyncratic returns: a common aggregate component ˜
rt determined by the marginal product of
capital and taxes, and an i.i.d. component ϵs,r,t with mean zero (Hubmer et al, 2021)
6 / 25
The model
The consumer
• CRRA utility, idiosyncratic shocks to discount rate δi,j,s,t
• ex ante heterogeneity (shares s(t): college and less than college)
• lifetime uncertainty: lives for up to 16 periods with πj,t < 1 (specific to education) & no annuity
• idiosyncratic income shocks: wi,j,s,t = wt · ηs,t · ωi,j,s,t.
with ωi,j,s,t given by AR(1) and approximated by Markov chains
• idiosyncratic returns: a common aggregate component ˜
rt determined by the marginal product of
capital and taxes, and an i.i.d. component ϵs,r,t with mean zero (Hubmer et al, 2021)
6 / 25
The model
The consumer
• CRRA utility, idiosyncratic shocks to discount rate δi,j,s,t
• ex ante heterogeneity (shares s(t): college and less than college)
• lifetime uncertainty: lives for up to 16 periods with πj,t < 1 (specific to education) & no annuity
• idiosyncratic income shocks: wi,j,s,t = wt · ηs,t · ωi,j,s,t.
with ωi,j,s,t given by AR(1) and approximated by Markov chains
• idiosyncratic returns: a common aggregate component ˜
rt determined by the marginal product of
capital and taxes, and an i.i.d. component ϵs,r,t with mean zero (Hubmer et al, 2021)
• pays taxes (capital income, consumption, and progressive on labor) & contributes to social security
6 / 25
The model
The consumer
• CRRA utility, idiosyncratic shocks to discount rate δi,j,s,t
• ex ante heterogeneity (shares s(t): college and less than college)
• lifetime uncertainty: lives for up to 16 periods with πj,t < 1 (specific to education) & no annuity
• idiosyncratic income shocks: wi,j,s,t = wt · ηs,t · ωi,j,s,t.
with ωi,j,s,t given by AR(1) and approximated by Markov chains
• idiosyncratic returns: a common aggregate component ˜
rt determined by the marginal product of
capital and taxes, and an i.i.d. component ϵs,r,t with mean zero (Hubmer et al, 2021)
• pays taxes (capital income, consumption, and progressive on labor) & contributes to social security
6 / 25
The model
The consumer
• CRRA utility, idiosyncratic shocks to discount rate δi,j,s,t
• ex ante heterogeneity (shares s(t): college and less than college)
• lifetime uncertainty: lives for up to 16 periods with πj,t < 1 (specific to education) & no annuity
• idiosyncratic income shocks: wi,j,s,t = wt · ηs,t · ωi,j,s,t.
with ωi,j,s,t given by AR(1) and approximated by Markov chains
• idiosyncratic returns: a common aggregate component ˜
rt determined by the marginal product of
capital and taxes, and an i.i.d. component ϵs,r,t with mean zero (Hubmer et al, 2021)
• pays taxes (capital income, consumption, and progressive on labor) & contributes to social security
+ firms use Cobb-Douglas production function with depreciation d
6 / 25
Redistribution by the government
The government:
• finances Gt expenditure
7 / 25
Redistribution by the government
The government:
• finances Gt expenditure
• balances progressive social security (PAYG DB): subsidyt
7 / 25
Redistribution by the government
The government:
• finances Gt expenditure
• balances progressive social security (PAYG DB): subsidyt
• services debt: ∆Dt + rt Dt = Dt − Dt−1 + rt Dt
7 / 25
Redistribution by the government
The government:
• finances Gt expenditure
• balances progressive social security (PAYG DB): subsidyt
• services debt: ∆Dt + rt Dt = Dt − Dt−1 + rt Dt
• collects taxes on capital income, consumption, and labor
Gt + subsidyt + ∆Dt + rt Dt = τk,t rt At + τc,t Ct + Taxℓ,t
7 / 25
Redistribution by the government
The government:
• finances Gt expenditure
• balances progressive social security (PAYG DB): subsidyt
• services debt: ∆Dt + rt Dt = Dt − Dt−1 + rt Dt
• collects taxes on capital income, consumption, and labor
Gt + subsidyt + ∆Dt + rt Dt = τk,t rt At + τc,t Ct + Taxℓ,t
• Progressive labor taxation (Benabou, 2002)
T (yj,t ) = yj,t − (1 − τℓ)y1−λ
j,t
7 / 25
Redistribution by the government - continued
Current US social security
ρ ¯
J,t · f B
¯
J,t = 0.9 · min{f ¯
J,t , F1,t } + 0.32 · min{f ¯
J,t − F1,t , F2,t } + 0.15 · (f ¯
J,t − F2,t )
8 / 25
Redistribution by the government - continued
Current US social security
ρ ¯
J,t · f B
¯
J,t = 0.9 · min{f ¯
J,t , F1,t } + 0.32 · min{f ¯
J,t − F1,t , F2,t } + 0.15 · (f ¯
J,t − F2,t )
The consumer choice: effects through the budget constraint and inter-temporal choice
ai,j+1,s,t+1 + (1 + τc,t )ci,j,s,t = (1 + (1 − τk,t )rt )ai,j,s,t + yj,t − T (yi,j,s,t ) + Γi,j,s,t + bi,j,s,t
8 / 25
Redistribution by the government - continued
Current US social security
ρ ¯
J,t · f B
¯
J,t = 0.9 · min{f ¯
J,t , F1,t } + 0.32 · min{f ¯
J,t − F1,t , F2,t } + 0.15 · (f ¯
J,t − F2,t )
The consumer choice: effects through the budget constraint and inter-temporal choice
ai,j+1,s,t+1 + (1 + τc,t )ci,j,s,t = (1 + (1 − τk,t )rt )ai,j,s,t + yj,t − T (yi,j,s,t ) + Γi,j,s,t + bi,j,s,t
u′
(c)i,j,s,t
u′(c)i,j,s,t+1
= πj,t · δj,s,t · (1 + (1 − τk,t )rt )
8 / 25
Redistribution by the government - continued
Current US social security
ρ ¯
J,t · f B
¯
J,t = 0.9 · min{f ¯
J,t , F1,t } + 0.32 · min{f ¯
J,t − F1,t , F2,t } + 0.15 · (f ¯
J,t − F2,t )
The consumer choice: effects through the budget constraint and inter-temporal choice
ai,j+1,s,t+1 + (1 + τc,t )ci,j,s,t = (1 + (1 − τk,t )rt )ai,j,s,t + yj,t − T (yi,j,s,t ) + Γi,j,s,t + bi,j,s,t
u′
(c)i,j,s,t
u′(c)i,j,s,t+1
= πj,t · δj,s,t · (1 + (1 − τk,t )rt )
+ obvious intra-temporal choice tradeoffs dued to τc,t and T (yi,j,s,t )
8 / 25
Calibration
Replicating the US economy
CRRA preferences with risk aversion θ = 2:
• Discounting:
aggregate δ matches the capital to output ratio of 3 in 2015
variance of shocks to δ matches Gini on wealth inequality in 1960
9 / 25
Replicating the US economy
CRRA preferences with risk aversion θ = 2:
• Discounting:
aggregate δ matches the capital to output ratio of 3 in 2015
variance of shocks to δ matches Gini on wealth inequality in 1960
Income inequality:
• College premium: Goldin andi Katz (2009) and share of college graduates: Bailey and Dynarski (2011)
• Income uncertainty: [PSID] persistence: 0.964 (college) and 0.980 (no college) and innovations vary by
birth cohort
9 / 25
Replicating the US economy
CRRA preferences with risk aversion θ = 2:
• Discounting:
aggregate δ matches the capital to output ratio of 3 in 2015
variance of shocks to δ matches Gini on wealth inequality in 1960
Income inequality:
• College premium: Goldin andi Katz (2009) and share of college graduates: Bailey and Dynarski (2011)
• Income uncertainty: [PSID] persistence: 0.964 (college) and 0.980 (no college) and innovations vary by
birth cohort
Social security: we replicate the balance, contribution rate and benefits
9 / 25
Replicating the US economy
CRRA preferences with risk aversion θ = 2:
• Discounting:
aggregate δ matches the capital to output ratio of 3 in 2015
variance of shocks to δ matches Gini on wealth inequality in 1960
Income inequality:
• College premium: Goldin andi Katz (2009) and share of college graduates: Bailey and Dynarski (2011)
• Income uncertainty: [PSID] persistence: 0.964 (college) and 0.980 (no college) and innovations vary by
birth cohort
Social security: we replicate the balance, contribution rate and benefits
Fiscal side takes the debt path from SNA
• τk , τc : McDaniel (2020), Bayer et. al (2020)
• τl , labor tax progression: Barro & Sahasakul (1983), Mertens & Montiel Olea (2018), Ferrere &
Navarro (2018)
9 / 25
Replicating the US economy
CRRA preferences with risk aversion θ = 2:
• Discounting:
aggregate δ matches the capital to output ratio of 3 in 2015
variance of shocks to δ matches Gini on wealth inequality in 1960
Income inequality:
• College premium: Goldin andi Katz (2009) and share of college graduates: Bailey and Dynarski (2011)
• Income uncertainty: [PSID] persistence: 0.964 (college) and 0.980 (no college) and innovations vary by
birth cohort
Social security: we replicate the balance, contribution rate and benefits
Fiscal side takes the debt path from SNA
• τk , τc : McDaniel (2020), Bayer et. al (2020)
• τl , labor tax progression: Barro & Sahasakul (1983), Mertens & Montiel Olea (2018), Ferrere &
Navarro (2018)
Depreciation rate d - matches the variation in data
9 / 25
Calibration: evolution of TFP, labor share & depreciation (GGDC)
10 / 25
Calibration: evolution of college share & college premium
11 / 25
Calibration: evolution of consumption taxation and capital taxation
12 / 25
Calibration: evolution of labor taxation
13 / 25
Calibration: evolution of social security contributions
14 / 25
Model vs data
Model vs data: evolution of social security benefits
15 / 25
Model vs data: evolution of the interest rate
16 / 25
Model vs data: income inequality
17 / 25
Model vs data: wealth inequality decomposition
18 / 25
Model vs data: wealth inequality change
19 / 25
Results
Demographics is actually a big thing
20 / 25
Three kinds of experiments
Disentangle the relative importance of the composition and behavioral effects
Γfm
a,t − Γcf
a,t
(Γfm
a,t − Γcf
a,t ) − (Γfm
a,1975 − Γcf
a,1975)
• the components of demographics
• the role of taxes
• the role of income inequality
21 / 25
Components of demographics: diffs and diffs-in-diffs
22 / 25
Demographics in context: diffs and diffs-in-diffs
23 / 25
Drivers of the income channel
Demographics in context: diffs and diffs-in-diffs
24 / 25
Conclusions
Summarizing
Still very much work in progress!
25 / 25
Summarizing
Still very much work in progress!
• So far, our model does a good job in replicating rise in wealth inequality
25 / 25
Summarizing
Still very much work in progress!
• So far, our model does a good job in replicating rise in wealth inequality
• We trace the drivers to:
25 / 25
Summarizing
Still very much work in progress!
• So far, our model does a good job in replicating rise in wealth inequality
• We trace the drivers to:
• Pretty massive labor market (consistent with earlier evidence)
25 / 25
Summarizing
Still very much work in progress!
• So far, our model does a good job in replicating rise in wealth inequality
• We trace the drivers to:
• Pretty massive labor market (consistent with earlier evidence)
• Not so large role for taxes (earlier evidence stressed this channel)
25 / 25
Summarizing
Still very much work in progress!
• So far, our model does a good job in replicating rise in wealth inequality
• We trace the drivers to:
• Pretty massive labor market (consistent with earlier evidence)
• Not so large role for taxes (earlier evidence stressed this channel)
• Gradually rising and big role of longevity
25 / 25
Summarizing
Still very much work in progress!
• So far, our model does a good job in replicating rise in wealth inequality
• We trace the drivers to:
• Pretty massive labor market (consistent with earlier evidence)
• Not so large role for taxes (earlier evidence stressed this channel)
• Gradually rising and big role of longevity
• Way forward
25 / 25
Summarizing
Still very much work in progress!
• So far, our model does a good job in replicating rise in wealth inequality
• We trace the drivers to:
• Pretty massive labor market (consistent with earlier evidence)
• Not so large role for taxes (earlier evidence stressed this channel)
• Gradually rising and big role of longevity
• Way forward
• Think about evidence from other countries
25 / 25
Summarizing
Still very much work in progress!
• So far, our model does a good job in replicating rise in wealth inequality
• We trace the drivers to:
• Pretty massive labor market (consistent with earlier evidence)
• Not so large role for taxes (earlier evidence stressed this channel)
• Gradually rising and big role of longevity
• Way forward
• Think about evidence from other countries
• We learned a lot about what works and what does not → implications for our models
25 / 25
Summarizing
Still very much work in progress!
• So far, our model does a good job in replicating rise in wealth inequality
• We trace the drivers to:
• Pretty massive labor market (consistent with earlier evidence)
• Not so large role for taxes (earlier evidence stressed this channel)
• Gradually rising and big role of longevity
• Way forward
• Think about evidence from other countries
• We learned a lot about what works and what does not → implications for our models
• Fully internalizing the implications of demographics
25 / 25
Thank you for your attention!
w: grape.org.pl
t: grape org
f: grape.org
e: j.tyrowicz@grape.org.pl
26 / 25

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Demographic transition and the rise of wealth inequality

  • 1. What shapes the U.S. wealth distribution? Longevity vs income inequality Krzysztof Makarski (FAME|GRAPE and Warsaw School of Economics) Joanna Tyrowicz (FAME|GRAPE, University of Regensburg, and IZA) Piotr Zoch (FAME|GRAPE, University of Warsaw) EPCS, Vienna, 2024 1 / 25
  • 3. Unprecedented rise in wealth inequality in the US 2 / 25
  • 4. The existing explanations Explanation 1 | Rising income inequality Gabaix et al. (2016), Chetty et al. (2017), Guvenen et al. (2021, 2022) which leads to a rise in wealth inequality Saez i Zucman (2016), Piketty et al. (2018), Gibson-Davis i Hill (2021), Black et al (2022) 3 / 25
  • 5. The existing explanations Explanation 1 | Rising income inequality Gabaix et al. (2016), Chetty et al. (2017), Guvenen et al. (2021, 2022) which leads to a rise in wealth inequality Saez i Zucman (2016), Piketty et al. (2018), Gibson-Davis i Hill (2021), Black et al (2022) Explanation 2 | Insufficient redistributon Krussell, Smith and Hubmer (2020) 3 / 25
  • 6. The existing explanations Explanation 1 | Rising income inequality Gabaix et al. (2016), Chetty et al. (2017), Guvenen et al. (2021, 2022) which leads to a rise in wealth inequality Saez i Zucman (2016), Piketty et al. (2018), Gibson-Davis i Hill (2021), Black et al (2022) Explanation 2 | Insufficient redistributon Krussell, Smith and Hubmer (2020) Observation | Longevity rises 3 / 25
  • 7. The existing explanations Explanation 1 | Rising income inequality Gabaix et al. (2016), Chetty et al. (2017), Guvenen et al. (2021, 2022) which leads to a rise in wealth inequality Saez i Zucman (2016), Piketty et al. (2018), Gibson-Davis i Hill (2021), Black et al (2022) Explanation 2 | Insufficient redistributon Krussel, Smith and Hubmer (2020) Observation | Longevity rises having important economic implications: 1. incentives for old-age saving ↑ 2. discrepancy between young and around-retirement ↑ 3. share of population near retirement ↑ 4 / 25
  • 8. The existing explanations Explanation 1 | Rising income inequality Gabaix et al. (2016), Chetty et al. (2017), Guvenen et al. (2021, 2022) which leads to a rise in wealth inequality Saez i Zucman (2016), Piketty et al. (2018), Gibson-Davis i Hill (2021), Black et al (2022) Explanation 2 | Insufficient redistributon Krussel, Smith and Hubmer (2020) Observation | Longevity rises having important economic implications: 1. incentives for old-age saving ↑ 2. discrepancy between young and around-retirement ↑ 3. share of population near retirement ↑ Our aim: study the role of longevity rise for wealth inequality in the US (1960-2020) 4 / 25
  • 9. Contribution Our model has a lot of data driven moving parts: 1. OLG - accounting for rise in longevity 5 / 25
  • 10. Contribution Our model has a lot of data driven moving parts: 1. OLG - accounting for rise in longevity 2. Drivers of change in the economy 5 / 25
  • 11. Contribution Our model has a lot of data driven moving parts: 1. OLG - accounting for rise in longevity 2. Drivers of change in the economy • income inequality: 5 / 25
  • 12. Contribution Our model has a lot of data driven moving parts: 1. OLG - accounting for rise in longevity 2. Drivers of change in the economy • income inequality: • labor share 5 / 25
  • 13. Contribution Our model has a lot of data driven moving parts: 1. OLG - accounting for rise in longevity 2. Drivers of change in the economy • income inequality: • labor share • college premium & share of college-educated 5 / 25
  • 14. Contribution Our model has a lot of data driven moving parts: 1. OLG - accounting for rise in longevity 2. Drivers of change in the economy • income inequality: • labor share • college premium & share of college-educated • income shocks vary across birth cohorts 5 / 25
  • 15. Contribution Our model has a lot of data driven moving parts: 1. OLG - accounting for rise in longevity 2. Drivers of change in the economy • income inequality: • labor share • college premium & share of college-educated • income shocks vary across birth cohorts • tax policies: 5 / 25
  • 16. Contribution Our model has a lot of data driven moving parts: 1. OLG - accounting for rise in longevity 2. Drivers of change in the economy • income inequality: • labor share • college premium & share of college-educated • income shocks vary across birth cohorts • tax policies: • tax rates & progression 5 / 25
  • 17. Contribution Our model has a lot of data driven moving parts: 1. OLG - accounting for rise in longevity 2. Drivers of change in the economy • income inequality: • labor share • college premium & share of college-educated • income shocks vary across birth cohorts • tax policies: • tax rates & progression • government expenditure & debt/GDP ratio 5 / 25
  • 18. Contribution Our model has a lot of data driven moving parts: 1. OLG - accounting for rise in longevity 2. Drivers of change in the economy • income inequality: • labor share • college premium & share of college-educated • income shocks vary across birth cohorts • tax policies: • tax rates & progression • government expenditure & debt/GDP ratio 3. We put that all into play in general equilibrium 5 / 25
  • 19. Contribution Our model has a lot of data driven moving parts: 1. OLG - accounting for rise in longevity 2. Drivers of change in the economy • income inequality: • labor share • college premium & share of college-educated • income shocks vary across birth cohorts • tax policies: • tax rates & progression • government expenditure & debt/GDP ratio 3. We put that all into play in general equilibrium 5 / 25
  • 20. Contribution Our model has a lot of data driven moving parts: 1. OLG - accounting for rise in longevity 2. Drivers of change in the economy • income inequality: • labor share • college premium & share of college-educated • income shocks vary across birth cohorts • tax policies: • tax rates & progression • government expenditure & debt/GDP ratio 3. We put that all into play in general equilibrium In simulations we “switch off” specific channels of change 5 / 25
  • 22. The model The consumer • CRRA utility, idiosyncratic shocks to discount rate δi,j,s,t 6 / 25
  • 23. The model The consumer • CRRA utility, idiosyncratic shocks to discount rate δi,j,s,t 6 / 25
  • 24. The model The consumer • CRRA utility, idiosyncratic shocks to discount rate δi,j,s,t • ex ante heterogeneity (shares s(t): college and less than college) 6 / 25
  • 25. The model The consumer • CRRA utility, idiosyncratic shocks to discount rate δi,j,s,t • ex ante heterogeneity (shares s(t): college and less than college) • lifetime uncertainty: lives for up to 16 periods with πj,t < 1 (specific to education) & no annuity 6 / 25
  • 26. The model The consumer • CRRA utility, idiosyncratic shocks to discount rate δi,j,s,t • ex ante heterogeneity (shares s(t): college and less than college) • lifetime uncertainty: lives for up to 16 periods with πj,t < 1 (specific to education) & no annuity • idiosyncratic income shocks: wi,j,s,t = wt · ηs,t · ωi,j,s,t. with ωi,j,s,t given by AR(1) and approximated by Markov chains 6 / 25
  • 27. The model The consumer • CRRA utility, idiosyncratic shocks to discount rate δi,j,s,t • ex ante heterogeneity (shares s(t): college and less than college) • lifetime uncertainty: lives for up to 16 periods with πj,t < 1 (specific to education) & no annuity • idiosyncratic income shocks: wi,j,s,t = wt · ηs,t · ωi,j,s,t. with ωi,j,s,t given by AR(1) and approximated by Markov chains • idiosyncratic returns: a common aggregate component ˜ rt determined by the marginal product of capital and taxes, and an i.i.d. component ϵs,r,t with mean zero (Hubmer et al, 2021) 6 / 25
  • 28. The model The consumer • CRRA utility, idiosyncratic shocks to discount rate δi,j,s,t • ex ante heterogeneity (shares s(t): college and less than college) • lifetime uncertainty: lives for up to 16 periods with πj,t < 1 (specific to education) & no annuity • idiosyncratic income shocks: wi,j,s,t = wt · ηs,t · ωi,j,s,t. with ωi,j,s,t given by AR(1) and approximated by Markov chains • idiosyncratic returns: a common aggregate component ˜ rt determined by the marginal product of capital and taxes, and an i.i.d. component ϵs,r,t with mean zero (Hubmer et al, 2021) 6 / 25
  • 29. The model The consumer • CRRA utility, idiosyncratic shocks to discount rate δi,j,s,t • ex ante heterogeneity (shares s(t): college and less than college) • lifetime uncertainty: lives for up to 16 periods with πj,t < 1 (specific to education) & no annuity • idiosyncratic income shocks: wi,j,s,t = wt · ηs,t · ωi,j,s,t. with ωi,j,s,t given by AR(1) and approximated by Markov chains • idiosyncratic returns: a common aggregate component ˜ rt determined by the marginal product of capital and taxes, and an i.i.d. component ϵs,r,t with mean zero (Hubmer et al, 2021) 6 / 25
  • 30. The model The consumer • CRRA utility, idiosyncratic shocks to discount rate δi,j,s,t • ex ante heterogeneity (shares s(t): college and less than college) • lifetime uncertainty: lives for up to 16 periods with πj,t < 1 (specific to education) & no annuity • idiosyncratic income shocks: wi,j,s,t = wt · ηs,t · ωi,j,s,t. with ωi,j,s,t given by AR(1) and approximated by Markov chains • idiosyncratic returns: a common aggregate component ˜ rt determined by the marginal product of capital and taxes, and an i.i.d. component ϵs,r,t with mean zero (Hubmer et al, 2021) • pays taxes (capital income, consumption, and progressive on labor) & contributes to social security 6 / 25
  • 31. The model The consumer • CRRA utility, idiosyncratic shocks to discount rate δi,j,s,t • ex ante heterogeneity (shares s(t): college and less than college) • lifetime uncertainty: lives for up to 16 periods with πj,t < 1 (specific to education) & no annuity • idiosyncratic income shocks: wi,j,s,t = wt · ηs,t · ωi,j,s,t. with ωi,j,s,t given by AR(1) and approximated by Markov chains • idiosyncratic returns: a common aggregate component ˜ rt determined by the marginal product of capital and taxes, and an i.i.d. component ϵs,r,t with mean zero (Hubmer et al, 2021) • pays taxes (capital income, consumption, and progressive on labor) & contributes to social security 6 / 25
  • 32. The model The consumer • CRRA utility, idiosyncratic shocks to discount rate δi,j,s,t • ex ante heterogeneity (shares s(t): college and less than college) • lifetime uncertainty: lives for up to 16 periods with πj,t < 1 (specific to education) & no annuity • idiosyncratic income shocks: wi,j,s,t = wt · ηs,t · ωi,j,s,t. with ωi,j,s,t given by AR(1) and approximated by Markov chains • idiosyncratic returns: a common aggregate component ˜ rt determined by the marginal product of capital and taxes, and an i.i.d. component ϵs,r,t with mean zero (Hubmer et al, 2021) • pays taxes (capital income, consumption, and progressive on labor) & contributes to social security + firms use Cobb-Douglas production function with depreciation d 6 / 25
  • 33. Redistribution by the government The government: • finances Gt expenditure 7 / 25
  • 34. Redistribution by the government The government: • finances Gt expenditure • balances progressive social security (PAYG DB): subsidyt 7 / 25
  • 35. Redistribution by the government The government: • finances Gt expenditure • balances progressive social security (PAYG DB): subsidyt • services debt: ∆Dt + rt Dt = Dt − Dt−1 + rt Dt 7 / 25
  • 36. Redistribution by the government The government: • finances Gt expenditure • balances progressive social security (PAYG DB): subsidyt • services debt: ∆Dt + rt Dt = Dt − Dt−1 + rt Dt • collects taxes on capital income, consumption, and labor Gt + subsidyt + ∆Dt + rt Dt = τk,t rt At + τc,t Ct + Taxℓ,t 7 / 25
  • 37. Redistribution by the government The government: • finances Gt expenditure • balances progressive social security (PAYG DB): subsidyt • services debt: ∆Dt + rt Dt = Dt − Dt−1 + rt Dt • collects taxes on capital income, consumption, and labor Gt + subsidyt + ∆Dt + rt Dt = τk,t rt At + τc,t Ct + Taxℓ,t • Progressive labor taxation (Benabou, 2002) T (yj,t ) = yj,t − (1 − τℓ)y1−λ j,t 7 / 25
  • 38. Redistribution by the government - continued Current US social security ρ ¯ J,t · f B ¯ J,t = 0.9 · min{f ¯ J,t , F1,t } + 0.32 · min{f ¯ J,t − F1,t , F2,t } + 0.15 · (f ¯ J,t − F2,t ) 8 / 25
  • 39. Redistribution by the government - continued Current US social security ρ ¯ J,t · f B ¯ J,t = 0.9 · min{f ¯ J,t , F1,t } + 0.32 · min{f ¯ J,t − F1,t , F2,t } + 0.15 · (f ¯ J,t − F2,t ) The consumer choice: effects through the budget constraint and inter-temporal choice ai,j+1,s,t+1 + (1 + τc,t )ci,j,s,t = (1 + (1 − τk,t )rt )ai,j,s,t + yj,t − T (yi,j,s,t ) + Γi,j,s,t + bi,j,s,t 8 / 25
  • 40. Redistribution by the government - continued Current US social security ρ ¯ J,t · f B ¯ J,t = 0.9 · min{f ¯ J,t , F1,t } + 0.32 · min{f ¯ J,t − F1,t , F2,t } + 0.15 · (f ¯ J,t − F2,t ) The consumer choice: effects through the budget constraint and inter-temporal choice ai,j+1,s,t+1 + (1 + τc,t )ci,j,s,t = (1 + (1 − τk,t )rt )ai,j,s,t + yj,t − T (yi,j,s,t ) + Γi,j,s,t + bi,j,s,t u′ (c)i,j,s,t u′(c)i,j,s,t+1 = πj,t · δj,s,t · (1 + (1 − τk,t )rt ) 8 / 25
  • 41. Redistribution by the government - continued Current US social security ρ ¯ J,t · f B ¯ J,t = 0.9 · min{f ¯ J,t , F1,t } + 0.32 · min{f ¯ J,t − F1,t , F2,t } + 0.15 · (f ¯ J,t − F2,t ) The consumer choice: effects through the budget constraint and inter-temporal choice ai,j+1,s,t+1 + (1 + τc,t )ci,j,s,t = (1 + (1 − τk,t )rt )ai,j,s,t + yj,t − T (yi,j,s,t ) + Γi,j,s,t + bi,j,s,t u′ (c)i,j,s,t u′(c)i,j,s,t+1 = πj,t · δj,s,t · (1 + (1 − τk,t )rt ) + obvious intra-temporal choice tradeoffs dued to τc,t and T (yi,j,s,t ) 8 / 25
  • 43. Replicating the US economy CRRA preferences with risk aversion θ = 2: • Discounting: aggregate δ matches the capital to output ratio of 3 in 2015 variance of shocks to δ matches Gini on wealth inequality in 1960 9 / 25
  • 44. Replicating the US economy CRRA preferences with risk aversion θ = 2: • Discounting: aggregate δ matches the capital to output ratio of 3 in 2015 variance of shocks to δ matches Gini on wealth inequality in 1960 Income inequality: • College premium: Goldin andi Katz (2009) and share of college graduates: Bailey and Dynarski (2011) • Income uncertainty: [PSID] persistence: 0.964 (college) and 0.980 (no college) and innovations vary by birth cohort 9 / 25
  • 45. Replicating the US economy CRRA preferences with risk aversion θ = 2: • Discounting: aggregate δ matches the capital to output ratio of 3 in 2015 variance of shocks to δ matches Gini on wealth inequality in 1960 Income inequality: • College premium: Goldin andi Katz (2009) and share of college graduates: Bailey and Dynarski (2011) • Income uncertainty: [PSID] persistence: 0.964 (college) and 0.980 (no college) and innovations vary by birth cohort Social security: we replicate the balance, contribution rate and benefits 9 / 25
  • 46. Replicating the US economy CRRA preferences with risk aversion θ = 2: • Discounting: aggregate δ matches the capital to output ratio of 3 in 2015 variance of shocks to δ matches Gini on wealth inequality in 1960 Income inequality: • College premium: Goldin andi Katz (2009) and share of college graduates: Bailey and Dynarski (2011) • Income uncertainty: [PSID] persistence: 0.964 (college) and 0.980 (no college) and innovations vary by birth cohort Social security: we replicate the balance, contribution rate and benefits Fiscal side takes the debt path from SNA • τk , τc : McDaniel (2020), Bayer et. al (2020) • τl , labor tax progression: Barro & Sahasakul (1983), Mertens & Montiel Olea (2018), Ferrere & Navarro (2018) 9 / 25
  • 47. Replicating the US economy CRRA preferences with risk aversion θ = 2: • Discounting: aggregate δ matches the capital to output ratio of 3 in 2015 variance of shocks to δ matches Gini on wealth inequality in 1960 Income inequality: • College premium: Goldin andi Katz (2009) and share of college graduates: Bailey and Dynarski (2011) • Income uncertainty: [PSID] persistence: 0.964 (college) and 0.980 (no college) and innovations vary by birth cohort Social security: we replicate the balance, contribution rate and benefits Fiscal side takes the debt path from SNA • τk , τc : McDaniel (2020), Bayer et. al (2020) • τl , labor tax progression: Barro & Sahasakul (1983), Mertens & Montiel Olea (2018), Ferrere & Navarro (2018) Depreciation rate d - matches the variation in data 9 / 25
  • 48. Calibration: evolution of TFP, labor share & depreciation (GGDC) 10 / 25
  • 49. Calibration: evolution of college share & college premium 11 / 25
  • 50. Calibration: evolution of consumption taxation and capital taxation 12 / 25
  • 51. Calibration: evolution of labor taxation 13 / 25
  • 52. Calibration: evolution of social security contributions 14 / 25
  • 54. Model vs data: evolution of social security benefits 15 / 25
  • 55. Model vs data: evolution of the interest rate 16 / 25
  • 56. Model vs data: income inequality 17 / 25
  • 57. Model vs data: wealth inequality decomposition 18 / 25
  • 58. Model vs data: wealth inequality change 19 / 25
  • 60. Demographics is actually a big thing 20 / 25
  • 61. Three kinds of experiments Disentangle the relative importance of the composition and behavioral effects Γfm a,t − Γcf a,t (Γfm a,t − Γcf a,t ) − (Γfm a,1975 − Γcf a,1975) • the components of demographics • the role of taxes • the role of income inequality 21 / 25
  • 62. Components of demographics: diffs and diffs-in-diffs 22 / 25
  • 63. Demographics in context: diffs and diffs-in-diffs 23 / 25
  • 64. Drivers of the income channel
  • 65. Demographics in context: diffs and diffs-in-diffs 24 / 25
  • 67. Summarizing Still very much work in progress! 25 / 25
  • 68. Summarizing Still very much work in progress! • So far, our model does a good job in replicating rise in wealth inequality 25 / 25
  • 69. Summarizing Still very much work in progress! • So far, our model does a good job in replicating rise in wealth inequality • We trace the drivers to: 25 / 25
  • 70. Summarizing Still very much work in progress! • So far, our model does a good job in replicating rise in wealth inequality • We trace the drivers to: • Pretty massive labor market (consistent with earlier evidence) 25 / 25
  • 71. Summarizing Still very much work in progress! • So far, our model does a good job in replicating rise in wealth inequality • We trace the drivers to: • Pretty massive labor market (consistent with earlier evidence) • Not so large role for taxes (earlier evidence stressed this channel) 25 / 25
  • 72. Summarizing Still very much work in progress! • So far, our model does a good job in replicating rise in wealth inequality • We trace the drivers to: • Pretty massive labor market (consistent with earlier evidence) • Not so large role for taxes (earlier evidence stressed this channel) • Gradually rising and big role of longevity 25 / 25
  • 73. Summarizing Still very much work in progress! • So far, our model does a good job in replicating rise in wealth inequality • We trace the drivers to: • Pretty massive labor market (consistent with earlier evidence) • Not so large role for taxes (earlier evidence stressed this channel) • Gradually rising and big role of longevity • Way forward 25 / 25
  • 74. Summarizing Still very much work in progress! • So far, our model does a good job in replicating rise in wealth inequality • We trace the drivers to: • Pretty massive labor market (consistent with earlier evidence) • Not so large role for taxes (earlier evidence stressed this channel) • Gradually rising and big role of longevity • Way forward • Think about evidence from other countries 25 / 25
  • 75. Summarizing Still very much work in progress! • So far, our model does a good job in replicating rise in wealth inequality • We trace the drivers to: • Pretty massive labor market (consistent with earlier evidence) • Not so large role for taxes (earlier evidence stressed this channel) • Gradually rising and big role of longevity • Way forward • Think about evidence from other countries • We learned a lot about what works and what does not → implications for our models 25 / 25
  • 76. Summarizing Still very much work in progress! • So far, our model does a good job in replicating rise in wealth inequality • We trace the drivers to: • Pretty massive labor market (consistent with earlier evidence) • Not so large role for taxes (earlier evidence stressed this channel) • Gradually rising and big role of longevity • Way forward • Think about evidence from other countries • We learned a lot about what works and what does not → implications for our models • Fully internalizing the implications of demographics 25 / 25
  • 77. Thank you for your attention! w: grape.org.pl t: grape org f: grape.org e: j.tyrowicz@grape.org.pl 26 / 25