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Income Inequality in France, 1901–1998

Thomas Piketty1,2

1 Centre for Economic Policy Research · 2 Centre Pour La Recherche Economique et ses Applications

Journal of Political Economy 2003

This paper uses data from income tax returns (191598), wage tax returns (191998), and inheritance tax returns (190294) in order to compute homogeneous, yearly estimates of income, wage, and wealth inequality for twentieth-century France. The main conclusion is that the decline in income inequality that took place during the first half of the century was mostly accidental. In France, and possibly in a number of other countries as well, wage inequality has been extremely stable in the long run, and the secular decline in income inequality is for the most part a capital income phenomenon. Holders of large fortunes were badly hurt by major shocks during the 191445 period, and they were never able to fully recover from these shocks, probably because of the dynamic effects of progressive taxation on capital accumulation and pretax income inequality.

DOI
10.1086/376955
Volume
111 (5)
Pages
1004-1042
Language
en
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BibTeX
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