Income Dynamics in Sweden 1985-2016

Benjamin U. Friedrich, Lisa Laun, C. Meghir
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引用次数: 6

Abstract

This paper analyzes earnings inequality and earnings dynamics in Sweden over 1985–2016. The deep recession in the early 1990s marks a historic turning point with a massive increase in earnings inequality and earnings volatility, and the impact of the recession and the recovery from it lasted for decades. In the aftermath of the recession, we find steady growth in real earnings across the entire distribution for men and women and decreasing inequality over more than 20 years. Earnings dynamics differ substantially by gender, education, and origin. Men face lower volatility than women, but their earnings growth is more closely tied to the business cycle. Earnings volatility is also higher among high-educated and foreign-born workers. We document an important role of social benefits usage for the overall trends and for differences across sub-populations. Higher benefits enrollment, especially for women and immigrants, is associated with higher earnings volatility. As the generosity and usage of benefit programs declined over time, we find stronger earnings growth among low-income workers, consistent with higher self-sufficiency.
1985-2016年瑞典收入动态
本文分析了1985-2016年瑞典的收入不平等和收入动态。20世纪90年代初的深度衰退标志着一个历史性的转折点,收入不平等和收入波动大幅增加,经济衰退的影响和复苏持续了几十年。在经济衰退之后,我们发现20多年来,男性和女性的实际收入在整个分配中稳步增长,不平等现象在减少。收入动态因性别、教育程度和出身而有很大差异。男性面临的波动性低于女性,但他们的收入增长与商业周期的关系更为密切。受过高等教育和在外国出生的工人的收入波动也更大。我们记录了社会福利使用对总体趋势和亚人群差异的重要作用。更高的福利登记率,尤其是女性和移民,与更高的收入波动性有关。随着时间的推移,福利计划的慷慨程度和使用率下降,我们发现低收入工人的收入增长更强劲,这与更高的自给自足相一致。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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