Published on 01 January 2019 |

Version 1

Top incomes in Germany, 1871-2014

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Bartels, Charlotte

Description

This is the replication package for the publication "Top incomes in Germany, 1871-2014". The study provides new evidence on top income shares in Germany from industrialization to the present. Income concentration was high in the nineteenth century, dropped sharply after WWI and during the hyperinflation years of the 1920s, then increased rapidly throughout the Nazi period beginning in the 1930s. Following the end of WWII, German top income shares returned to 1920s levels. The German pattern stands in contrast to developments in France, the United Kingdom, and the United States, where WWII brought a sizeable and lasting reduction in top income shares. Since the turn of the millennium, income concentration in Germany has been on the rise and is today among the highest in Europe. The capital share is consistently positively associated with income concentration, whereas growth, technological change, trade, unions, and top tax rates are positively associated in some periods and negative in others.

Citations (0)

Mentions (0)

Metrics

Dataset Index

1.8

FAIR Score

73%

Citations

0

Mentions

0

Metrics Over Time

Publication Details

DOI

Publisher

ICPSR - Interuniversity Consortium for Political and Social Research

Assigned Domain

Subfield

Sociology and Political Science

Field

Social Sciences

Domain

Social Sciences

Confidence Score

47%

Source

Scholar Data Model

Normalization Factors

FT

13.46

CTw

1.00

MTw

1.00