Accounting for Wealth in the Measurement of Household Income Edward N. Wolff New York University, NBER, and Levy Economics Institute Ajit Zacharias The.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Engineering Economics III. Adjustments We learned how to compute the value of money at different times and under different scenarios. We also learned.
Advertisements

Financial and Managerial Accounting
MANAGERIAL ACCOUNTING
John Wiley & Sons, Inc. © 2005 Prepared by Alice B. Sineath Forsyth Technical Community College Managerial Accounting Weygandt Kieso Kimmel CHAPTER 12.
INVESTMENT ANALYSIS OR CAPITAL BUDGETING. What is Capital Budgeting? THE PROCESS OF PLANNING EXPENDITURES ON ASSETS WHOSE RETURN WILL EXTEND BEYOND ONE.
© Mcgraw-Hill Companies, 2008 Farm Management Chapter 17 Investment Analysis.
Capital Budgeting and Cost Analysis Chapter 21.
Chapter 17 Investment Analysis
CHAPTER 4 BOND PRICES, BOND YIELDS, AND INTEREST RATE RISK.
The Data of Macroeconomics
16 Money Management and Financial Planning
CHAPTER 09 Cost of Capital
Measuring Economic Performance
7-1 Copyright (C) 2000 by Harcourt, Inc. All rights reserved. Chapter 7 Valuation Concepts Bond Values Stock Values Rates of Return Market Equilibrium.
Objectives Understand the basic concept and sources of capital associated with the cost of capital. Explain what is meant by the marginal cost of capital.
Capital Investment Choice Chapter 5
National Income Accounting
Chapter 7 Valuation Concepts © 2005 Thomson/South-Western.
Table 6.1 Share of Aggregate Income Received by Families by Each Income Quintile, 1929–2001 Income quintile Lowest
Fabozzi: Investment Management Graphics by
Chapter 15 Gross Domestic Product
C H A P T E R C H E C K L I S T When you have completed your study of this chapter, you will be able to Define GDP and explain why the value of production,
Wealth inequality and the Great Recession: Evidence from Sweden Jacob Lundberg and Daniel Waldenström Uppsala University Presentation at MiSOC/ISER, September.
Financial and Managerial Accounting Wild, Shaw, and Chiappetta Fifth Edition Wild, Shaw, and Chiappetta Fifth Edition McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2013.
Chapter 5 Valuation Concepts. 2 Basic Valuation From “The Time Value of Money” we realize that the value of anything is based on the present value of.
Capital Budgeting and Investment Analysis
1 Chapter 5: Essential Formulae in Project Appraisal A Coverage of the Formulae and Symbols Used to Evaluate Investment Projects.
Lecture No.1 By M Fahad Siddiqi Lecture (Finance) IBMS.
1 Chapter 15 Gross Domestic Product Key Concepts Key Concepts Summary Practice Quiz Internet Exercises Internet Exercises ©2002 South-Western College Publishing.
1 Measuring Economic Aggregates and the Circular Flow of Income CHAPTER 7 © 2003 South-Western/Thomson Learning.
Principles of Macroeconomics: Ch 10 Second Canadian Edition Chapter 10 Measuring a Nation’s Income © 2002 by Nelson, a division of Thomson Canada Limited.
Measuring Domestic Output and National Income
1 Class Structure and Household Economic Well-Being Ed Wolff Ajut Zacharias Discussant: Stephan Klasen.
Chapter 26 Capital Investment Decisions
National Income Accounting Measuring the total income and spending in an economy.
$$ Entrepreneurial Finance, 5th Edition Adelman and Marks 10-1 Pearson Higher Education ©2010 by Pearson Education, Inc. Upper Saddle River, NJ Capital.
FINANCE IN A CANADIAN SETTING Sixth Canadian Edition Lusztig, Cleary, Schwab.
Chapter McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2008 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Cost of Capital 11.
5 CHAPTER Measuring GDP and Economic Growth.
Gross Domestic Product (GDP) What is Gross Domestic Product and how we measure it? Why is this measure important? What are the definitions of the major.
6 - 1 CHAPTER 6 Bonds and Their Valuation Key features of bonds Bond valuation Measuring yield Assessing risk.
J. K. Dietrich - GSBA 548 – MBA.PM Spring 2007 Present Value: Calculations and Interpretation Classes 3 & 4: March 5 and 7 (LA) and March 1 and 6 (OCC)
McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2005 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. 5-1 Chapter 5 History of Interest Rates and Risk Premiums.
7 McGraw-Hill/IrwinCopyright © 2012 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Measuring Domestic Output and National Income.
Prepared by: Jamal Husein C H A P T E R 10 © 2005 Prentice Hall Business PublishingSurvey of Economics, 2/eO’Sullivan & Sheffrin Measuring a Nation’s Production.
1 20 C H A P T E R © 2001 Prentice Hall Business PublishingEconomics: Principles and Tools, 2/eO’Sullivan & Sheffrin Measuring a Nation’s Production and.
1 of 37 Chapter: 7 >> Krugman/Wells ©2009  Worth Publishers Circular Flow & GDP.
$$ Entrepreneurial Finance, 4th Edition By Adelman and Marks PRENTICE HALL ©2007 by Pearson Education, Inc. Upper Saddle River, NJ Capital Budgeting.
Distribution of Income Who has all the Money?. Income Distribution Free markets focus on EFFICIENCY not EQUALITY United States has enormous wealth but.
Principles of Macroeconomics Lecture 1 INTRODUCTION TO MACROECONOMICS & MEASURING ECONOMIC ACTIVITY.
7 McGraw-Hill/IrwinCopyright © 2012 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Measuring Domestic Output and National Income.
C H A P T E R 28: The Stock Market and the Economy © 2004 Prentice Hall Business PublishingPrinciples of Economics, 7/eKarl Case, Ray Fair 1 of 41 The.
By R. Gambacorta and A. Neri Bank of Italy - Statistical Analysis Directorate Wealth and its returns: economic inequality in Italy, The Bank.
Chapter 11 Cost of Capital Copyright © 2011 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin.
Needles Powers Crosson Financial and Managerial Accounting 10e Capital Investment Analysis 24 C H A P T E R © human/iStockphoto ©2014 Cengage Learning.
Money and Banking Lecture 11. Review of the Previous Lecture Application of Present Value Concept Internal Rate of Return Bond Pricing Real Vs Nominal.
Copyright © 2009 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. Chapter 2 The Measurement of Income, Prices, and Unemployment.
Measuring a Nation’s Income
National Income Concept and Measurement
24 Measuring Domestic Output and National Income McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2012 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
$$ Entrepreneurial Finance, 5th Edition Adelman and Marks PRENTICE HALL ©2010 by Pearson Education, Inc. Upper Saddle River, NJ Capital Budgeting.
National Income.
INVESTMENT ANALYSIS OR CAPITAL BUDGETING
National Income 9/12/2018 Dr.P.S EAB IV unit.
Valuation Concepts © 2005 Thomson/South-Western.
Distribution of Income
PLANNING FOR CAPITAL INVESTMENTS
National Income.
Presentation transcript:

Accounting for Wealth in the Measurement of Household Income Edward N. Wolff New York University, NBER, and Levy Economics Institute Ajit Zacharias The Levy Economics Institute For Presentation at the 2008 World Congress on National Accounts and Economic Performance for Nations

Summary of Findings 1. We analyze well-being in the US from 1983 to 2001 using the standard measure, gross money income, and one in which income from wealth is calculated as the sum of lifetime annuity from nonhome wealth and imputed rental-equivalent for owner-occupied homes. 2. Over this period, median well-being increases faster when these adjustments are made than when money income is used. 3. This adjustment also widens the income gap between African-Americans and whites but increases the relative well-being of the elderly.

Summary (continued) 4. Adding imputed rent and annuities from household wealth to household income considerably increases measured inequality and the share of income from wealth in inequality. 5. However, both measures show about the same rise in inequality over the period. 6. Our results also give little support to the assertion that the “working rich” has replaced rentiers at the top of the economic ladder.

Outline of paper 1. Summarize previous attempts to incorporate wealth into a measure of well-being. 2. Describe the main sources of data and concepts of wealth used in the study. 3. Discuss how we incorporate wealth into a combined income-net worth measure. 4. Show results for all households and sub-groups.

Outline (continued) 5. Compare our estimates of top income shares and those of Piketty and Saez (2003) to assess whether rentiers were at the top of the economic ladder during this period. 6. Make concluding remarks.

A review of previous literature 1. There have been several attempts to combine the income and wealth dimension into a single index of household well-being. The most common technique is to convert the stock of wealth into a flow and add that flow to current income. In this approach, wealth is converted into a lifetime annuity for the expected remaining life of the family. The annuity is defined as a stream of annual payments which are equal over time and which will fully exhaust the stock of initial wealth. This annuity is then added to obtain an augmented measure of family income after property income is first subtracted from current money income so that there is no double counting of the returns from household wealth.

Literature review (continued) 2. Weisbrod and Hansen (1968) used the 1962 Survey of the Financial Characteristics of Consumers (SFCC). They found that the share of the top two income classes increased from 5 to 8 percent at a 4 percent annuity rate and to 10 percent at a 10 percent rate, while the share of the bottom income class fell from 20 percent to 18 and then to 17 percent. 2. Taussig (1973) made use of the 1967 Survey of Economic Opportunity (SEO) database. When 1 6% annuity is added to current money income, the measured Gini coefficient for all families rose from 0.36 to 0.39.

Literature Review (continued) 4. Wolfson (1979) used the 1970 Canadian Survey of Consumer Finances. He found that among all households the inclusion of a wealth annuity with money income had no effect on the Gini coefficient, which remained in the range of 0.36 to The three studies generally found that the distribution of income becomes more unequal once the returns to wealth are included as part of total income. However, the disequalizing effects are not great because the annuity payments are small relative to current money income, typically on the order of 10 percent on average..

SOME MOTIVATION Consider two individuals A and B. A buys a bond at par value and receives only interest income. B buys the bond at a discount with the SAME yield and receives only capital gains. In NIPA only interest included in personal income but A and B are EQUALLY well-off in terms of well- being. (Also compare stocks with same yield but different mix of dividends and capital gains).

Data and concepts 1. Our basic data source is the Federal Reserve Board’s Surveys of Consumer Finances (SCF) for 1983, 1989, 1995, and We impute rent for owner-occupied housing by distributing the total amount of imputed rent in the GDP to homeowners in the SCF, based on the values of their house. On average, imputed rent was 5.6 percent and 5.4 percent (respectively) of the total value of houses in 1989 and in 2001.

Data and Concepts (continued) 3. Another difference in our approach compared to the earlier ones cited above is that we use actual historical rates of return in computing lifetime annuities. Moreover, we take into account the differences in the portfolio composition of non-home wealth by computing the lifetime annuity as the weighted average of annuity flows generated by individual non-home wealth components with portfolio shares of these six components as weights. The lifetime annuity amount calculated is such that (i) it is the same for all remaining years of the younger spouse’s life. and (ii) it brings wealth down to zero at the end of the expected lifetime.

Data and Concepts (continued) 4. The total real rate of return of each non-home wealth component is the average of annual rates over a relatively long period of time, varying from 14 to 40 years, depending on the asset. The rationale for employing this method, instead of using the rate of return in an arbitrarily chosen year, is that the annuity value estimated this way is a better indicator of the resources available to the household on a sustainable basis over its lifetime. The total rates of return data we use are inclusive of both the capital gains and the income generated by the assets. In order to avoid double counting, we net out from the total income measure any property income already included in money income.

Table 1. Family Income by Alternative Definitions (2001$)