Morning Must-Read: John Quiggin: Wealth: Earned or Inherited?

John Quiggin: Wealth: earned or inherited?: “The efforts of the right to discredit Piketty’s Capital…

…have so far ranged from unconvincing to risible…. One point raised in this four-para summary by the Economist is that ‘today’s super-rich mostly come by their wealth through work, rather than via inheritance.’… For those who haven’t… got around to reading [the book]….

Wealth inequality is also high, though it has not increased as much as income inequality…. Rattner [says]… ‘those at the top were more likely to earn than inherit their riches’. Since I’m already noticing that point popping up in the places you might expect… let me point out that Rattner’s explanation… is wrong, and that there is every reason to expect a boom in inherited wealth. The fact that currently wealthy Americans have not, in general, inherited their wealth follows logically from the fact that, in their parents’ generation, there weren’t comparable accumulations of wealth to be bequeathed… growing inequality of income must precede growing inequality of wealth, since wealth is simply the cumulative excess of income over consumption…. So, given highly unequal incomes, and social immobility, we can expect inheritance to play a much bigger role in explaining inequality for the generations now entering adulthood than for the current recipients of high incomes…

May 7, 2014

AUTHORS:

Brad DeLong
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