Income inequality in Ireland, 1987-2019
Citation:
Roantree, Barra, Barrett, Michelle, Income inequality in Ireland, 1987-2019, Fiscal Studies, 45, 2, 2024, 143-153Download Item:
Abstract:
Ireland has experienced rapid – if volatile – growth over
the last three decades. While this performance looks less
impressive when considered over a longer horizon and is
better seen as belated convergence making up for lost time
in the first 50 years of independence, this paper highlights
an aspect of the Irish experience that does stand out as
quite remarkable: how broad-based and inclusive growth in
household disposable income was. Drawing on over three
decades of harmonised household survey data, we first show
that income inequality fell substantially over this period, the
product of disposable income growth that was stronger at
the bottom than the middle or top of the distribution. We
then tentatively suggest some important factors that might
have contributed towards the patterns of growth experienced
– including tax and transfer reforms, a rise in two-earner
couples and a fall in the average size of households – before
concluding with some directions for future research.
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Community Foundation Ireland
Author's Homepage:
http://people.tcd.ie/broantreDescription:
PUBLISHED
Author: Roantree, Barra
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Journal ArticleCollections
Series/Report no:
Fiscal Studies45
2
Availability:
Full text availableSubject:
inequality, Ireland, povertySubject (TCD):
Inclusive SocietyDOI:
https://doi.org/10.1111/1475-5890.12370ISSN:
0143-5671Metadata
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