Understanding Rising Concentration at the Extremes of the U.S. Income Distribution

Jeffrey Thompson, Jesse Bricker, Michael Parisi
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Abstract

We explore the importance of income fluctuations at the top of the U.S. income distribution in understanding rising income concentration. Very high income families—including the top .001 percent—account for much of the recent top income growth, but are under-studied even in the literature exploring high-income groups. Using 3-year panels of tax records from 1997 to 2013 we document that top-income shares are lower—typically by about 20 percent—when measured by using a three-year income average, and that cyclical income fluctuations are greatest at the very top of the income distribution. Trends toward rising concentration over time, however, cannot be explained by these fluctuations, as growth in top-income shares is comparable for annual and three-year average income, and measured income dispersion has increased only for the very top group. Further, the probability of remaining in the highest income groups over multiple years increased over the sample period.
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理解美国收入分配两极的集中度上升
我们探讨了美国收入分配顶端的收入波动对理解收入集中度上升的重要性。非常高的收入家庭——包括收入最高的0.001%——占了最近收入增长的大部分,但即使在探索高收入群体的文献中,也没有得到充分的研究。利用1997年至2013年3年的税收记录面板,我们发现,当使用三年收入平均值来衡量时,最高收入占比较低——通常为20%左右,而且在收入分配的最顶层,周期性收入波动最大。然而,随着时间的推移,集中度上升的趋势不能用这些波动来解释,因为最高收入份额的增长与年度和三年平均收入相当,而测量的收入分散只在最高收入群体中增加。此外,在样本期内,多年保持在最高收入群体中的可能性增加了。
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