What Accounts for the Rising Share of Women in the Top 1%?
, Stone Center,
Richard Burkhauser,
Nicolas Hérault,
Stephen Jenkins and
Roger Wilkins ()
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, Stone Center: The Graduate Center/CUNY
No wdt2r, SocArXiv from Center for Open Science
Abstract:
The share of women in the top 1% of the UK’s income distribution has been growing over the last two decades (as in several other countries). Our first contribution is to account for this secular change using regressions of the probability of being in the top 1%, fitted separately for men and women, in order to contrast between the sexes the role of changes in characteristics and changes in returns to characteristics. We show that the rise of women in the top 1% is primarily accounted for by their greater increases (relative to men) in the number of years spent in full-time education. Although most top income analysis uses tax return data, we derive our findings taking advantage of the much more extensive information about personal characteristics that is available in survey data. Our use of survey data requires justification given survey under-coverage of top incomes. Providing this justification is our second contribution. (Stone Center on Socio-Economic Inequality Working Paper)
Date: 2020-07-06
New Economics Papers: this item is included in nep-ltv
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Related works:
Working Paper: What accounts for the rising share of women in the top 1%? (2020) 
Working Paper: What accounts for the rising share of women in the top 1\%? (2020) 
Working Paper: What Accounts for the Rising Share of Women in the Top 1%? (2020) 
Working Paper: What Accounts for the Rising Share of Women in the Top 1%? (2020) 
Working Paper: What accounts for the rising share of women in the top 1%? (2020) 
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:osf:socarx:wdt2r
DOI: 10.31219/osf.io/wdt2r
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