Shocks, frictions, and inequality in US business cycles
What is this research about and why did you do it?
Inequality in income and wealth in the US has substantially increased since the 1980s and is frequently the subject of public debate. Potential policy responses depend on our understanding of the underlying drivers of inequality. We assess to what extent business cycles, and the policy responses to them, are an important contributor to inequality dynamics in the short and long run. This business cycle perspective expands the study of inequality, which has typically focused on permanent changes such as the rising skill premium or changes in the tax and transfer system.
How did you answer this question?
A new generation of monetary business cycle models that feature heterogeneous agents and incomplete markets, known as HANK models, allow us to study inequality through the lens of the business cycle. We use a full-information Bayesian approach that has become the standard practice in macroeconomics, extending this technique to the analysis of HANK models. We first estimate the model on aggregate time series only, covering the period from 1954 to 2015. We then re-estimate the model with two additional observables for the shares of wealth and income held by the top 10% of households in each of these dimensions.
What did you find?
We find that business cycle shocks explain a substantial fraction of movements in inequality because they generate very persistent movements in wealth and income inequality, shown by the black line in the figure below. These movements are consistent with the U-shaped evolution of US inequality during the period from 1954 to 2015. In the HANK model, transitory shocks persistently redistribute across households because wealth accumulates past shocks and has a long memory.
The black line shows the evolution of the top 10% wealth share (measured by log deviations) and the contribution of ten sources of shocks implied by the model. Shaded areas correspond to NBER-dated recessions.
Our analysis suggests that increasing price mark-ups, high equity returns (indicated in the figure by investment-specific technology shocks), and low tax progressivity are key drivers of the increase in wealth inequality since the 1980s, while monetary shocks do not play an important role.
What implications does this have for the research on wealth concentration or economic inequality?
Future research on inequality should take business cycles into account, and the study of optimal business cycle policy should take inequality into account. A framework that allows for permanent and transitory shocks is required to study the interaction between trends like skill premia and recessions. Our findings further suggest exploring the implications for inequality of shocks that affect household insurance and portfolios for the business cycle.
What are the next steps in your agenda?
Understanding differences in portfolios is key to understanding wealth inequality. We will further explore:
- the heterogeneity in household portfolios,
- the liquidity of asset markets,
- the importance of fluctuations in the liquidity of an asset for portfolio choices and the business cycles.
Citation and related resources
This paper can be cited as follows: Bayer, C., Born, B., Luetticke, R. (2020). 'Shocks, Frictions, and Inequality in US Business Cycles.' CEPR Discussion Paper 14364. Available at:
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