Wednesday, October 17, 2012

The Distribution of Wealth

A friend of mine posted this picture on his Facebook showing the distribution of wealth in the United States.


The part of the graph I want to focus on is the actual distribution of wealth.  I have seen many such graphs in the past mostly from progressive authors promoting the idea that government needs to do something to equalize wealth.  The framing of such articles seem to often imply that wealth distribution in the United States is completely out of step with the rest of the world and that we need to be more like Europe which would serve to equalize things.  With this in mind, I started wondering just how wealth was distributed in other parts of the world.  Finding this information was more difficult than I thought it would be.  I did finally come across this 2008 paper which provides the wealth distribution for a number of different (mostly European) countries.  Here is the most useful table from the report.

Note: This information pertains to wealth distribution, not income distribution.  Second, I really hate the word distribution when discussing such things since it can leave the a reader who is unfamiliar with economics with the idea that wealth is 'distributed'.  Keep in mind that the word distribution here is being used as it would be when discussing statistics.  


I don't much care for how the information is presented so here are some pie charts for various countries listed in the above table (I'm better at working with pie charts than bar graphs so this is what you get).












Here is the wealth distribution from the first bar graph presented as a pie chart for comparison purposes.


Obviously the data is somewhat dated but as I said above, it was the best information I could find.  If anyone knows of another source please leave a comment with a link.

Based on the above information, it doesn't look as if the United States is all that different than other parts of the world.  Obviously the U.S. is at the higher end of the spectrum with the top 20% having 84% of the wealth but in other parts of the world the rich command a somewhat similar share of wealth.  This is not all that surprising to me as it seems to follow the Pareto Principle (also known as the 80-20 rule).

What is somewhat surprising is Denmark.  For some reason there bottom 40% seem to have negative wealth (especially the bottom 20% with -17.3%).  This is very interesting since I have always been under that impression that Denmark has a massive welfare system.  It is certainly worth further investigation.


3 comments:

  1. Many thanks for this Gerry. I have just seen the Harvard charts and was looking for comparisons, especially for Australia, where I come from. I'll let you know if I find anything more up to date.

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  2. Here is a link for Oz from a recent UNICEF report http://www.unicef.org.au/Discover/unicef-australia-blog/November-2012/Why-Poverty,-and-does-Australia-need-to-worry-abou.aspx

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  3. I saw this chart at work today, and it really pissed me off. This chart only shows that the average person has a really poor understanding of statistics. To quote Mark Twain, "There are lies, damned lies and statistics". Of course the top 20 percent of wealth holders have a far greater amount of wealth compared to the rest of the population. It is like saying the records of top 20 percent of football teams are going to be significantly higher than that of the average football team, no duh that is statistics. There is a principle called the Pareto principle, better known as the 80/20 rule. "80% of your sales come from 20% of your clients." https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pareto_principle In short, you should expect, as seen in the chart that 80 percent of the wealth would be owned by 20 percent of the people. Now chart three is bogus. If just given a chart, of course people are going to give numbers like that. Those that seem seemingly equal. But look at it carefully. It says that the top 20 percent of wealth earners. The Elon Musks, the Steve Jobs, the Taylor Swifts, should only have wealth 50 percent more than the average person. (the top 20 percent only have 30 percent of the wealth). It says that the poorest 20 percent of the population should only have the wealth half that of the average person. That includes some people who don't deserve to be in that situation. But it also includes the people who don't save, who don't work hard, who much of people. In short, these people deserve only to have the wealth a third of that of the wealthy. What people are asking is the person who studied hard in school, who worked and took massive risks, borrowed every dime and risked career and reputation to start a business, should only have 3 times that of the laziest person in the country. If you were to phrase it like that, rather then the way the poll was conducted, I think you would find that people are willing to have more of an "wealth gap". Note, this is coming from someone who votes mostly Democratic, and wants some income distribution. We shouldn't mislead the American public to get this result.

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