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Symposium on Piketty's Capital

Do Piketty and Saez Misstate Income Inequality? Critiquing the Critiques

, &
Pages 30-46
Received 09 Feb 2016
Accepted 27 Oct 2016
Published online: 16 Jan 2017

ABSTRACT

A large body of literature points to sharply growing income inequality over the past half century. The Piketty and Saez dataset that measures income distribution provides empirical support for this claim. Our article evaluates three prominent criticisms of this dataset as well as the responses of Piketty and Saez to these criticisms. One key argument against using their dataset is that Piketty and Saez do not control for income shifting by top income earners in response to the Tax Reform Act of 1986 (TRA86) and thus overstate income inequality. In evaluating this criticism we find that a segment of their dataset likely understates income inequality; this is just the opposite of what critics assert. This implies that the Piketty–Saez dataset is a valuable resource for income inequality research and that scholars can use it to build more refined, accurate and insightful measures of income inequality.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.

Disclosure

The authors have no financial interest in, nor anticipate a financial benefit from, the application of the findings.

 

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