Left and right: a tale of two tails of the wealth distribution
We study a model of wealth accumulation in altruistic lineages, in which households face uninsurable risk, investment indivisibilities and borrowing constraints. A thick upper tail of the stationary distribution of wealth is shown to emerge as a robust prediction, irrespective of (1) the presence of...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Economic theory 2024-12, Vol.78 (4), p.1389-1433 |
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creator | D’Amato, Marcello Di Pietro, Christian Sorge, Marco M. |
description | We study a model of wealth accumulation in altruistic lineages, in which households face uninsurable risk, investment indivisibilities and borrowing constraints. A thick upper tail of the stationary distribution of wealth is shown to emerge as a robust prediction, irrespective of (1) the presence of multidimensional (wealth and ability) heterogeneity and non-convexities in human capital formation, and (2) the nature of parental bequest motives (joy-of-giving vs. paternalism). Additionally, (3) we identify conditions under which the unique, ergodic wealth distribution exhibits a mass point at the bottom of its support, where credit market imperfections continue to affect, along the convergence process, the structure of wealth transitions at the lineage level. Motivated by these results, we then analyze the sensitivity of the left tail to various frictions and fiscal instruments that affect bequest strategies and the ensuing transmission of wealth across generations. In particular, capital income or bequest taxes with no redistribution may reinforce economic mechanisms underpinning mobility traps in the left tail, thereby increasing the persistence of households in the lowest tiers of the wealth distribution. |
doi_str_mv | 10.1007/s00199-024-01581-w |
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subjects | Accumulation Altruism Bequests Bond markets Capital formation Convergence Economic theory Economic Theory/Quantitative Economics/Mathematical Methods Economics Economics and Finance Game Theory Households Human capital Intergenerational transmission Microeconomics Mobility Paternalism Public Finance Redistribution Research Article Social and Behav. Sciences Wealth distribution |
title | Left and right: a tale of two tails of the wealth distribution |
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