Arbeitspapier
Cyclical transactions and wealth inequality
Wealth is distributed more unevenly than income, and one contributing factor might be that richer households earn higher portfolio returns. I uncover one channel that causes portfolio returns to be increasing in wealth: Poorer households consistently buy risky assets in booms-when expected returns are low-and sell after a bust-when expected returns are high. Although time-varying expected returns are a robust empirical fact, theories are ambiguous on whether poorer or richer households engage in such cyclical trading patterns. I estimate the trading patterns for households across wealth levels, in the US housing market for 1988-2013. I interact housing ownership patterns from deeds records with household-level wealth, which I infer from merging owners' surnames with their name-based income in the 1940 full Census. The estimated dispersion in expected returns from this "buy-high-sell-low" channel is large: The interquartile-range difference is 60 basis points per year. The channel predicts that geographies with historically higher volatility will feature more wealth inequality than income inequality: I verify this implication in the data. These results suggest that a government policy intended to boost poorer households' wealth via homeownership can backfire if it ignores the status of house prices.
- Sprache
-
Englisch
- Erschienen in
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Series: Working Paper ; No. WP 2022-05
- Klassifikation
-
Wirtschaft
Intertemporal Household Choice; Life Cycle Models and Saving
Personal Income, Wealth, and Their Distributions
Business Fluctuations; Cycles
Portfolio Choice; Investment Decisions
Urban, Rural, Regional, Real Estate, and Transportation Economics: Housing Demand
- Thema
-
Wealth inequality
business cycles
real estate asset
timing of transaction
wealth return
- Ereignis
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Geistige Schöpfung
- (wer)
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Sakong, Jung
- Ereignis
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Veröffentlichung
- (wer)
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Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago
- (wo)
-
Chicago, IL
- (wann)
-
2022
- DOI
-
doi:10.21033/wp-2022-05
- Handle
- Letzte Aktualisierung
-
10.03.2025, 11:41 MEZ
Datenpartner
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Objekttyp
- Arbeitspapier
Beteiligte
- Sakong, Jung
- Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago
Entstanden
- 2022