Was fehlt in der EVS? eine Verteilungsanalyse hoher Einkommen mit der verknüpften Einkommensteuerstatistik für Selbständige und abhängig Beschäftigte
Research output: Working paper › Working papers
Authors
An outstanding microdatabase for the analysis of income and its distribution is the Income and Consumption Survey (EVS). However, high income above the 35.000 DM household net income per month frontier are not available. In this study we analyse for the first time, which distributional consequences a merging between the EVS and the Income Tax Statistics (EStS) records with its high (above these 35.000 DM) incomes will have. We start with a description of the Wage and Income Tax Statistic (EStS) as a well suited microdatabasis to income analyses in general and for high income in particular. Our merging strategy uses taxpaying classes divided by householdtypes. With the merged Income Tax Statistic EStS/EVS 1995 vs. EVS 1993 we compare and analyse the distribution of income on the household level and on the personal level via equivalence income concepts. We investigate in partic ular high incomes with a distributional analysis and a decomposition for the self-employed and the employees. Structural analyses then decribe the spectrum of rich and non rich households for different socio-economic attributes. The concluding remarks emphasize the need for an integrated microdatafile for a targeted economic and social policy.
Translated title of the contribution | What is missing in the EVS?: A distributional analysis of high income with the merged income tax statistic for self-employed and employees |
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Original language | German |
Place of Publication | Lüneburg |
Publisher | Forschungsinstitut Freie Berufe |
Number of pages | 41 |
Publication status | Published - 05.2001 |
- Economics - Einkommensverteilung, Hohe Einkommen, Reiche Haushalte, Verknüpfung von EVS und Einkommensteuerstatistik, Integrierte Mikrodatenfiles, Selbstständige und abhängig Beschäftigte, income distribution, high income, rich households, merging of the Income and Consumption Sample (EVS) and the Wage and Income Tax Statistic (EStS), Integrated microdatafiles, Selfemployed and Employees