I've been recommended these two (one, two) Mark Thoma posts on Alan Reynolds' views about inequality. Thoma makes several points including the important one that the Census Bureau's Current Population Survey uses $999,999 as the maximum income that can be coded so that a person making $1 million, a person making $10 million, and a person making $100 million will all register as earning $999,999. This is a serious flaw in the data's utility as a measure of inequality. He also notes that Piketty and Saez argue, in a manner that most economists seem to me to regard as perfectly credible, that "fiscal manipulation" in response to changes in the tax code could be responsible for short-term errors in the IRS data but not for problems with the long-term trend.
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Thoma on Reynolds on Inequality
17 Dec 2006 12:41 pm
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Comments closed December 31, 2006.

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Posted by ayje vmuabiycn | June 11, 2007 10:03 PM