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Real-time inequality and the welfare state in motion: evidence from COVID-19 in Spain

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Real-time inequality and the welfare state in motion: evidence from COVID-19 in Spain. / Aspachs, Oriol; Durante, Ruben; Graziano, Alberto et al.
In: Economic Policy, Vol. 37, No. 109, 31.01.2022, p. 165-199.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Aspachs, O, Durante, R, Graziano, A, Mestres, J, Montalvo, JG & Reynal-Querol, M 2022, 'Real-time inequality and the welfare state in motion: evidence from COVID-19 in Spain', Economic Policy, vol. 37, no. 109, pp. 165-199. https://doi.org/10.1093/epolic/eiac008

APA

Aspachs, O., Durante, R., Graziano, A., Mestres, J., Montalvo, J. G., & Reynal-Querol, M. (2022). Real-time inequality and the welfare state in motion: evidence from COVID-19 in Spain. Economic Policy, 37(109), 165-199. https://doi.org/10.1093/epolic/eiac008

Vancouver

Aspachs O, Durante R, Graziano A, Mestres J, Montalvo JG, Reynal-Querol M. Real-time inequality and the welfare state in motion: evidence from COVID-19 in Spain. Economic Policy. 2022 Jan 31;37(109):165-199. doi: 10.1093/epolic/eiac008

Author

Aspachs, Oriol ; Durante, Ruben ; Graziano, Alberto et al. / Real-time inequality and the welfare state in motion : evidence from COVID-19 in Spain. In: Economic Policy. 2022 ; Vol. 37, No. 109. pp. 165-199.

Bibtex

@article{040b6f185f914929983eacc2d7928a67,
title = "Real-time inequality and the welfare state in motion: evidence from COVID-19 in Spain",
abstract = "G. Montalvo and Marta Reynal-Querol?>Official statistics on economic inequality are only available at low frequency and with considerable delay. This makes it challenging to assess the impact on inequality of fast-unfolding crises like the COVID-19 pandemic, and to rapidly evaluate and tailor policy responses. We propose a new methodology to track income inequality at high frequency using anonymized data from bank records for over three million account holders in Spain. Using this approach, we analyse how inequality evolved between February and November 2020 (compared to the same months of 2019). We first show that the wage distribution in our data matches very closely that from official labour surveys. We then document that, in the absence of government intervention, inequality would have increased dramatically, mainly due to job losses and wage cuts experienced by low-wage workers. The increase in pre-transfer inequality was especially pronounced among the young and the foreign-born, and in regions more dependent on services. Public transfers and unemployment insurance schemes were effective at providing a safety net to the most affected segments of the population and at offsetting most of the increase in inequality. Increased inequality is primarily driven by differential changes in employment rate. Indeed, using individual-level regressions, we find that, over the course of the pandemic, the probability of being employed decreased drastically for workers in the lower part of the pre-COVID wage distribution, young cohorts and foreign-born.",
author = "Oriol Aspachs and Ruben Durante and Alberto Graziano and Josep Mestres and Montalvo, {Jose G.} and Marta Reynal-Querol",
year = "2022",
month = jan,
day = "31",
doi = "10.1093/epolic/eiac008",
language = "English",
volume = "37",
pages = "165--199",
journal = "Economic Policy",
issn = "0266-4658",
publisher = "Wiley-Blackwell",
number = "109",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Real-time inequality and the welfare state in motion

T2 - evidence from COVID-19 in Spain

AU - Aspachs, Oriol

AU - Durante, Ruben

AU - Graziano, Alberto

AU - Mestres, Josep

AU - Montalvo, Jose G.

AU - Reynal-Querol, Marta

PY - 2022/1/31

Y1 - 2022/1/31

N2 - G. Montalvo and Marta Reynal-Querol?>Official statistics on economic inequality are only available at low frequency and with considerable delay. This makes it challenging to assess the impact on inequality of fast-unfolding crises like the COVID-19 pandemic, and to rapidly evaluate and tailor policy responses. We propose a new methodology to track income inequality at high frequency using anonymized data from bank records for over three million account holders in Spain. Using this approach, we analyse how inequality evolved between February and November 2020 (compared to the same months of 2019). We first show that the wage distribution in our data matches very closely that from official labour surveys. We then document that, in the absence of government intervention, inequality would have increased dramatically, mainly due to job losses and wage cuts experienced by low-wage workers. The increase in pre-transfer inequality was especially pronounced among the young and the foreign-born, and in regions more dependent on services. Public transfers and unemployment insurance schemes were effective at providing a safety net to the most affected segments of the population and at offsetting most of the increase in inequality. Increased inequality is primarily driven by differential changes in employment rate. Indeed, using individual-level regressions, we find that, over the course of the pandemic, the probability of being employed decreased drastically for workers in the lower part of the pre-COVID wage distribution, young cohorts and foreign-born.

AB - G. Montalvo and Marta Reynal-Querol?>Official statistics on economic inequality are only available at low frequency and with considerable delay. This makes it challenging to assess the impact on inequality of fast-unfolding crises like the COVID-19 pandemic, and to rapidly evaluate and tailor policy responses. We propose a new methodology to track income inequality at high frequency using anonymized data from bank records for over three million account holders in Spain. Using this approach, we analyse how inequality evolved between February and November 2020 (compared to the same months of 2019). We first show that the wage distribution in our data matches very closely that from official labour surveys. We then document that, in the absence of government intervention, inequality would have increased dramatically, mainly due to job losses and wage cuts experienced by low-wage workers. The increase in pre-transfer inequality was especially pronounced among the young and the foreign-born, and in regions more dependent on services. Public transfers and unemployment insurance schemes were effective at providing a safety net to the most affected segments of the population and at offsetting most of the increase in inequality. Increased inequality is primarily driven by differential changes in employment rate. Indeed, using individual-level regressions, we find that, over the course of the pandemic, the probability of being employed decreased drastically for workers in the lower part of the pre-COVID wage distribution, young cohorts and foreign-born.

U2 - 10.1093/epolic/eiac008

DO - 10.1093/epolic/eiac008

M3 - Journal article

VL - 37

SP - 165

EP - 199

JO - Economic Policy

JF - Economic Policy

SN - 0266-4658

IS - 109

ER -