Income inequality and poverty risks receive a lot of attention in public debates and current research. To make income comparable across different types of households, applying the "(modified) OECD scale" – an equivalence scale with fixed weights for each household type – has become a quasi-standard in research. Instead, we derive a base-dependent equivalence scale allowing for scale weights that vary with income, building on micro-data from Germany. Our results suggest that appropriate equivalence scales are much steeper at the lower end of the income distribution than they are for higher income levels. We illustrate our findings by applying them to data on family income differentiated by household types. It turns out that using income-depe...
We use data from the Luxembourg Income Study to show the sensitivity of measures of relative economi...
Equivalence scales provide answers to questions like how much a household with four children needs t...
This article examines the effects of different income and food spending adult equivalence scales on ...
To account for the fact that a household's needs depend on its size and composition most studies on ...
To account for the fact that a household's needs depend on its size and composition most studie...
We suggest a simple survey method for obtaining direct subjective estimates of equivalence scales, a...
Total household income inequality can be very different from inequality measured at the income per-c...
In poverty and income inequality research, equivalence scales are used to adjust for the relative co...
Abstract: The authors present the theoretical bases and the results of an equivalence scale develope...
Equivalence scales are routinely applied to adjust the income of households of different sizes and c...
peer reviewedRecent studies in high-income industrialized countries have shown that equivalence scal...
In this paper, the equivalence scale elasticity will be estimated by using individual panel data on ...
We show that economies of scale estimated individually for each EU country differ from the officiall...
Income distribution and poverty measurement require weighting the impact of both economies of scale ...
The discussion paper deals with sensitivity influences upon the German personal income distribution ...
We use data from the Luxembourg Income Study to show the sensitivity of measures of relative economi...
Equivalence scales provide answers to questions like how much a household with four children needs t...
This article examines the effects of different income and food spending adult equivalence scales on ...
To account for the fact that a household's needs depend on its size and composition most studies on ...
To account for the fact that a household's needs depend on its size and composition most studie...
We suggest a simple survey method for obtaining direct subjective estimates of equivalence scales, a...
Total household income inequality can be very different from inequality measured at the income per-c...
In poverty and income inequality research, equivalence scales are used to adjust for the relative co...
Abstract: The authors present the theoretical bases and the results of an equivalence scale develope...
Equivalence scales are routinely applied to adjust the income of households of different sizes and c...
peer reviewedRecent studies in high-income industrialized countries have shown that equivalence scal...
In this paper, the equivalence scale elasticity will be estimated by using individual panel data on ...
We show that economies of scale estimated individually for each EU country differ from the officiall...
Income distribution and poverty measurement require weighting the impact of both economies of scale ...
The discussion paper deals with sensitivity influences upon the German personal income distribution ...
We use data from the Luxembourg Income Study to show the sensitivity of measures of relative economi...
Equivalence scales provide answers to questions like how much a household with four children needs t...
This article examines the effects of different income and food spending adult equivalence scales on ...