The Impact of Personal Income Distribution on the „Great Depression“ and the „Great Recession“
Keywords:
Personal Income Distribution, Great Depression, Great Recession, Random-Effects-RegressionAbstract
Well-known economists (Galbraith 1954/2009; Eccles 1951; Rajan 2010; Stiglitz 2012; Piketty 2014) identified “growing inequality” as one of the triggers of “Great Depression” respectively “Great Recession”. However there is little empirical evidence for this hypothesis. Kumhof/Ranciere (2010) built a theoretical model where they tested the “Rajan-hypothesis”, whereby growing income-inequality eventually caused the “Great Recession”. Bordo/Meissner (2012) and Gu/Huang (2014) used regression-models to show the relationship between growing inequality and the occurrence of crises. This paper examines the link between income inequality and the occurrence of crises – especially the “Great Depression” and the “Great Recession” – using a panel dataset containing information on eight countries for the period from 1920 to 2015. With a set of Generalized Linear Random-Effects-Regressions I tested whether income inequality can be identified as a significant predictor of crises. The models support the hypothesis of a positive relationship between growing inequality and the probability of the occurrence of crises.
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Copyright (c) 2015 Stefan Trappl
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.