Is Inequality Increasing? What Does It Mean For Investors?

 | Aug 10, 2017 15:55

Originally published by AMP Capital h2 Key points/h2

  • Inequality has been trending higher over recent decades. This is particularly the case in the emerging world and the US but is also evident in Australia.
  • Key drivers have been a rising profits share of GDP, technological innovation and globalisation. It has become more noticeable thanks to slow wages growth.
  • Inequality is natural and necessary in free market economies, but if it becomes too high it could slow economic growth.
  • The key for policy makers in dealing with rising inequality is to get the balance right. Otherwise the risk could be slower productivity growth. For investors, this could mean slower medium-term investment returns.
h2 Introduction/h2

The issue of rising inequality has seen increasing interest over the last year or so, particularly following the Brexit and Trump votes for which rising inequality was seen as a key driver. This is an issue we have looked at before in terms of driving a swing to the left amongst median voters in Anglo countries and contributing to a backlash against economic rationalist policies, but this note takes a more detailed look at the economic and investment implications.

h2 Is inequality rising?/h2

Because inequality is a politically-charged issue, all sorts of numbers are thrown around with a favourite seeming to be the share of gross income going to a particular income group, say the top 1% or 10%. But this may not be the best guide because of the impact of progressive income taxes and welfare transfers. In fact, the best measure of income inequality is the Gini coefficient calculated on incomes after taxes and transfers. Basically it shows the variation between the actual distribution of income in a country and what would apply if it’s distributed perfectly equally. As such, it ranges from zero indicating perfect equality to one indicating perfect inequality with one household, or individual, receiving all income. Naturally, there is much debate about the data but the best available for global comparisons appears to be from the OECD and the Standardised World Income Inequality Database. The Gini coefficient from these sources is shown for various countries and for developed and emerging country averages in the next chart.