Wealth-Income Ratios in a Small, Late-Industrializing, Welfare-State Economy: Sweden, 1810-2014

48 Pages Posted: 20 Oct 2015

See all articles by Daniel Waldenström

Daniel Waldenström

Research Institute of Industrial Economics (IFN)

Date Written: October 2015

Abstract

This paper uses new data on Swedish national wealth over a period of two hundred years to study whether the patterns in wealth-income ratios previously found by Piketty and Zucman (2014) for some very rich and large Western economies extend to smaller countries that were historically backward and developed a different set of political and economic institutions during the twentieth century. The findings point to both similarities and differences. In the pre-industrial era, Sweden had much lower wealth levels than the rest of Europe, and the main explanation is that the Swedes were too poor to save their income. Over the twentieth century, Swedish aggregate trends and levels are much more similar to those of the rest of Europe, but the structure of national wealth differs. In Sweden, government wealth grew much faster and became more important, not least through its relatively large public pension system. This suggests an explicit role of historical economic and political institutions for the long-run evolution of wealth-income ratios.

Keywords: Economic history, Household portfolios, Institutions, National wealth, Pension wealth, Welfare state

JEL Classification: D30, E01, E02, N30

Suggested Citation

Waldenström, Daniel, Wealth-Income Ratios in a Small, Late-Industrializing, Welfare-State Economy: Sweden, 1810-2014 (October 2015). CEPR Discussion Paper No. DP10878, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=2676564

Daniel Waldenström (Contact Author)

Research Institute of Industrial Economics (IFN) ( email )

Box 55665
Grevgatan 34, 2nd floor
Stockholm, SE-102 15
Sweden

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