The Course of Income Inequality As a Cohort Ages into Old-Age

41 Pages Posted: 16 Dec 2018

See all articles by Thomas L. Hungerford

Thomas L. Hungerford

National Academy of Social Insurance (NASI); Independent

Date Written: June 23, 2018

Abstract

Several researchers have shown that income inequality of a cohort increases as the cohort ages. The various studies examining cohort income inequality use a variety of data, measures, and methods. Is the U.S. experience documented in other studies due to potential biases due to data, measures and/or methods? This study examines cohort income inequality using nationally representative longitudinal data and a variety of inequality measures to follow a large sample of individuals from their late pre-retirement years into their retirement years. The findings are: (1) the course of the Gini coefficient is flat as the cohort ages into retirement, (2) but the course of income inequality as this cohort ages into retirement depends on the inequality measure employed, and (3) the trend results suggest that what is going on in the bottom part of the distribution is different from what is going on in the upper part.

Keywords: income inequality, aging, retirement income, earnings, Social Security, capital income

JEL Classification: D30, D33, D63, H55

Suggested Citation

Hungerford, Thomas L., The Course of Income Inequality As a Cohort Ages into Old-Age (June 23, 2018). Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=3289645 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.3289645

Thomas L. Hungerford (Contact Author)

National Academy of Social Insurance (NASI) ( email )

1776 Massachusetts Avenue, NW
Suite 615
Washington, DC 20036-1904
United States

Independent ( email )

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