Authors
Paul Eckerstorfer, Johannes Halak, Jakob Kapeller, Bernhard Schütz, Florian Springholz, Rafael Wildauer
Publication date
2016/12/1
Journal
Review of Income and Wealth
Volume
62
Issue
4
Pages
605-627
Description
It is a well‐known criticism that if the distribution of wealth is highly concentrated, survey data are hardly reliable when it comes to analyzing the richest parts of society. This paper addresses this criticism by providing a general rationale of the underlying methodological problem as well as by proposing a specific methodological approach tailored to correcting the arising bias. We illustrate the latter approach by using Austrian data from the Household Finance and Consumption Survey. Specifically, we identify suitable parameter combinations by using a series of maximum‐likelihood estimates and appropriate goodness‐of‐fit tests to avoid arbitrariness with respect to the fitting of the Pareto distribution. Our results suggest that the alleged non‐observation bias is considerable, accounting for about one quarter of total net wealth in the case of Austria. The method developed in this paper can easily be applied to other …
Total citations
201520162017201820192020202120222023202461110181714819105
Scholar articles
P Eckerstorfer, J Halak, J Kapeller, B Schütz… - Review of Income and Wealth, 2016