Volume 81, Issue 2 p. 271-293
Article

Levels and Trends in U.S. Income and its Distribution: A Crosswalk from Market Income towards a Comprehensive Haig-Simons Income Approach

Philip Armour,

Cornell University, Department of Economics, 404 Uris Hall, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY 14853, USA

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Richard V. Burkhauser,

Corresponding Author

Cornell University and the University of Melbourne, Department of Policy Analysis and Management, 259 MVR Hall, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY 14853, USA

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Jeff Larrimore,

Federal Reserve Board, 20th and Constitution Avenue, Washington, DC 20551, USA

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First published: 01 October 2014
Citations: 18

Abstract

Recent research on U.S. levels and trends in income inequality varies substantially based on how these studies measure income. We crosswalk (move between standards) from a market income of tax units to a more comprehensive measure of income including realized capital gains of households using a unified data set and replicate common findings in the literature. By using a comprehensive income definition in the spirit of Haig-Simons, considering yearly accrued capital gains rather than focusing on the delayed reporting of capital gains that appear in Internal Revenue Service tax return data, the observed growth in income inequality and top income shares since 1989 is dramatically reduced.

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