Scientific Journal Article
Ups and downs in finance, ups without downs in inequality
Socio-Economic Review
2023
Finance
Top Earners
Canada
Czechia
Denmark
France
Germany
Hungary
Japan
Netherlands
Norway
South Korea
Spain
Sweden

Abstract

The upswing in finance in recent decades has led to rising inequality, but do downswings in finance lead to a symmetric decline in inequality? We analyze the asymmetry of the effect of ups and downs in finance, and the effect of increased capital requirements and the bonus cap on national earnings inequality. We use administrative employer–employee-linked data from 1990 to 2019 for 12 countries and data from bank reports, from 2009 to 2017 in 13 European countries. We find a strong asymmetry in the effect of upswings and downswings in finance on earnings inequality, a weak, if any, mitigating effect of capital requirements on finance’s contribution to inequality, and a restructuring but no absolute effect of the bonus cap on financiers’ earnings. We suggest that while rising financiers’ wages increase inequality in upswings, they are resilient in downswings and thus downswings do not contribute to a symmetric decline in inequality.

Contributors

Olivier Godechot
Sciences Po
Nils Neumann
University of Michigen
István Boza
HUN-REN KRTK Institute of Economics
Martin Hällsten
Stockholm University
Lasse Folke Henriksen
Copenhagen Business School
Are Skeie Hermansen
University of Oslo
Feng Hou
University of Toronto
Jiwook Jung
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Naomi Kodama
Meiji Gakuin University
Alena Křížková
Czech Academy of Sciences
Zoltán Lippényi
University of Groningen
Marta Elvira
IESE Business School
Silvia Melzer
Eunmi Mun
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Halil Sabanci
Frankfurt School of Finance & Management

Other Contributors

Key Findings

While the increase in financial activities before the global financial crisis led to a boom in financial earnings and fueled the increase in the top one percent's share of earnings, the decline in financial activities after the global financial crisis did not significantly reduce financial wages or inequality at the top of the earnings distribution.