The relationship between income inequality and savings: evidence from household‐level panel data in Vietnam

The purpose of this paper is to address whether province-level income inequality is associated with household savings, as well as investigate how this relationship varies across different subgroups. The paper uses a unique balanced panel survey on access to resources of 2181 rural households between...

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Main Authors: Nhan Dang Tran, Chuong Nguyen Ong, Quy Dinh Le Nguyen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2020-01-01
Series:Journal of Applied Economics
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/15140326.2020.1816131
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spelling doaj-e108aa0f41a9410f801262af81eedbb82021-01-04T17:35:57ZengTaylor & Francis GroupJournal of Applied Economics1514-03261667-67262020-01-0123170972810.1080/15140326.2020.18161311816131The relationship between income inequality and savings: evidence from household‐level panel data in VietnamNhan Dang Tran0Chuong Nguyen Ong1Quy Dinh Le Nguyen2The University of Danang, Danang, VietnamThe University of Danang, Danang, VietnamThe University of Danang, Danang, VietnamThe purpose of this paper is to address whether province-level income inequality is associated with household savings, as well as investigate how this relationship varies across different subgroups. The paper uses a unique balanced panel survey on access to resources of 2181 rural households between 2008 and 2014 in twelve provinces of Vietnam. An instrumental variablegeneralized method of moments approach aimed to tackle the issue of the endogeneity is applied to estimate relationships between relevant variables. Consistent with the prediction of the social status hypothesis, we find that income inequality positively impacts on households savings. Further analysis also shows that the effect of inequality on savings is somewhat stronger in those including poorer, richer, younger, and married-headed households than in the others. Our results are robust to alternative inequality measures and subsamples.http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/15140326.2020.1816131income inequalityhousehold consumption and savingssocial status hypothesisrural vietnam
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Nhan Dang Tran
Chuong Nguyen Ong
Quy Dinh Le Nguyen
spellingShingle Nhan Dang Tran
Chuong Nguyen Ong
Quy Dinh Le Nguyen
The relationship between income inequality and savings: evidence from household‐level panel data in Vietnam
Journal of Applied Economics
income inequality
household consumption and savings
social status hypothesis
rural vietnam
author_facet Nhan Dang Tran
Chuong Nguyen Ong
Quy Dinh Le Nguyen
author_sort Nhan Dang Tran
title The relationship between income inequality and savings: evidence from household‐level panel data in Vietnam
title_short The relationship between income inequality and savings: evidence from household‐level panel data in Vietnam
title_full The relationship between income inequality and savings: evidence from household‐level panel data in Vietnam
title_fullStr The relationship between income inequality and savings: evidence from household‐level panel data in Vietnam
title_full_unstemmed The relationship between income inequality and savings: evidence from household‐level panel data in Vietnam
title_sort relationship between income inequality and savings: evidence from household‐level panel data in vietnam
publisher Taylor & Francis Group
series Journal of Applied Economics
issn 1514-0326
1667-6726
publishDate 2020-01-01
description The purpose of this paper is to address whether province-level income inequality is associated with household savings, as well as investigate how this relationship varies across different subgroups. The paper uses a unique balanced panel survey on access to resources of 2181 rural households between 2008 and 2014 in twelve provinces of Vietnam. An instrumental variablegeneralized method of moments approach aimed to tackle the issue of the endogeneity is applied to estimate relationships between relevant variables. Consistent with the prediction of the social status hypothesis, we find that income inequality positively impacts on households savings. Further analysis also shows that the effect of inequality on savings is somewhat stronger in those including poorer, richer, younger, and married-headed households than in the others. Our results are robust to alternative inequality measures and subsamples.
topic income inequality
household consumption and savings
social status hypothesis
rural vietnam
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/15140326.2020.1816131
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