Pro-rich Inflation in Europe: Implications for the Measurement of Inequality
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Datum
2018-05-17
Autor
Gürer, Eren
Weichenrieder, Alfons J.
SAFE No.
209
Metadata
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Zusammenfassung
This paper studies the distributional consequences of a systematic variation in expenditure shares and prices. Using European Union Household Budget Surveys and Harmonized Index of Consumer Prices data, we construct household-specific price indices and reveal the existence of a pro-rich inflation in Europe. Particularly, over the period 2001-15, the consumption bundles of the poorest deciles in 25 European countries have, on average, become 10.5 percentage points more expensive than those of the richest decile. We find that ignoring the differential inflation across the distribution underestimates the change in the Gini (based on consumption expenditure) by up to 0.03 points. Cross-country heterogeneity in this change is large enough to alter the inequality ranking of numerous countries. The average inflation effect we detect is almost as large as the change in the standard Gini measure over the period of interest.
Forschungsbereich
Macro Finance
Schlagworte
inequality, gini, eu countries, income dependent inflation
JEL-Klassifizierung
D31
Forschungsdaten
Thema
Household Finance
Monetary Policy
Fiscal Stability
Monetary Policy
Fiscal Stability
Beziehungen
1
Publikationstyp
Working Paper
Link zur Publikation
Collections
- LIF-SAFE Working Papers [334]