The Convergence of the Middle Class. New evidence for Europe

We analyse how the size of the middle class has evolved in 26 European countries between 2004 and 2013. With data from the European Survey on Income and Living Conditions (EU-SILC), we define households with a median equivalised disposable household income between 75% and 125% to be middle class. We...

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Main Authors: Derndorfer, Judith, Kranzinger, Stefan
Format: Others
Language:en
Published: WU Vienna University of Economics and Business 2017
Online Access:http://epub.wu.ac.at/5548/1/WP_Middle_class.pdf
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spelling ndltd-VIENNA-oai-epub.wu-wien.ac.at-55482019-06-26T23:16:54Z The Convergence of the Middle Class. New evidence for Europe Derndorfer, Judith Kranzinger, Stefan We analyse how the size of the middle class has evolved in 26 European countries between 2004 and 2013. With data from the European Survey on Income and Living Conditions (EU-SILC), we define households with a median equivalised disposable household income between 75% and 125% to be middle class. We find that in 16 out of 26 countries the middle class decreases and identify an increase in income polarization in all these countries, with the exception of Greece. We examine whether changes regarding the middle class can be attributed to changing household structure, unemployment rates or redistributive policies. Our results suggest that redistributive policies are most influential for explaining the change across country groups, whereas the other factors do not seem to have an impact. However, there is a great variation between countries. Due to government transfers and taxes, middle class increased 17 percentage points in Iceland, while only by 5.3 percentage points in Estonia. Exploring potential explanations for this gap, we define country groups with similar socio-economic policies and institutions. We observe that Social-Democratic countries and Central European economies have the biggest, while Baltic and Mediterranean countries show the smallest middle class. Analysing the impact of redistributive policies we find considerable differences between country groups and can show that liberal market economies do most, whereas Baltic countries do least for their middle class. WU Vienna University of Economics and Business 2017-05-09 Paper NonPeerReviewed en application/pdf http://epub.wu.ac.at/5548/1/WP_Middle_class.pdf Series: INEQ Working Paper Series http://epub.wu.ac.at/5548/
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description We analyse how the size of the middle class has evolved in 26 European countries between 2004 and 2013. With data from the European Survey on Income and Living Conditions (EU-SILC), we define households with a median equivalised disposable household income between 75% and 125% to be middle class. We find that in 16 out of 26 countries the middle class decreases and identify an increase in income polarization in all these countries, with the exception of Greece. We examine whether changes regarding the middle class can be attributed to changing household structure, unemployment rates or redistributive policies. Our results suggest that redistributive policies are most influential for explaining the change across country groups, whereas the other factors do not seem to have an impact. However, there is a great variation between countries. Due to government transfers and taxes, middle class increased 17 percentage points in Iceland, while only by 5.3 percentage points in Estonia. Exploring potential explanations for this gap, we define country groups with similar socio-economic policies and institutions. We observe that Social-Democratic countries and Central European economies have the biggest, while Baltic and Mediterranean countries show the smallest middle class. Analysing the impact of redistributive policies we find considerable differences between country groups and can show that liberal market economies do most, whereas Baltic countries do least for their middle class. === Series: INEQ Working Paper Series
author Derndorfer, Judith
Kranzinger, Stefan
spellingShingle Derndorfer, Judith
Kranzinger, Stefan
The Convergence of the Middle Class. New evidence for Europe
author_facet Derndorfer, Judith
Kranzinger, Stefan
author_sort Derndorfer, Judith
title The Convergence of the Middle Class. New evidence for Europe
title_short The Convergence of the Middle Class. New evidence for Europe
title_full The Convergence of the Middle Class. New evidence for Europe
title_fullStr The Convergence of the Middle Class. New evidence for Europe
title_full_unstemmed The Convergence of the Middle Class. New evidence for Europe
title_sort convergence of the middle class. new evidence for europe
publisher WU Vienna University of Economics and Business
publishDate 2017
url http://epub.wu.ac.at/5548/1/WP_Middle_class.pdf
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