Income Distribution in the United States

Political action has affected postwar income distribution in the United States mainly through policy-induced variations in macroeconomic activity and government transfer benefits in proportion to total income. We present a small dynamic model of the connections among the partisan balance of power, macroeconomic fluctuations, transfer spending trends, and income distribution outcomes. The model is based on the premise that the parties have different distributional goals, and it is designed to identify how shifts in party control of the presidency and the strength of the parties in Congress have affected the distribution of after-tax, after-transfer income by influencing cyclical economic performance and the flow of resources to transfer programs. We therefore extend the “partisan theory†of macroeconomic policy to the domain of income distribution outcomes.

[1]  H. Chappell,et al.  The Unemployment Rate Consequences of Partisan Monetary Policies , 1988 .

[2]  Douglas A. Hibbs,et al.  The American political economy : macroeconomics and electoral politics , 1988 .

[3]  J. Sachs,et al.  Political Parties and the Business Cycle in the United States, 1948-1984 , 1986 .

[4]  Who Gets What from Government , 1984 .

[5]  A. Lindbeck Budget Expansion and Cost Inflation , 1983 .

[6]  S. Bowles Schooling and Inequality from Generation to Generation , 1972, Journal of Political Economy.

[7]  Douglas A. Hibbs,et al.  Political Parties and Macroeconomic Policy , 1977, American Political Science Review.

[8]  J. Mincer Schooling, Experience, and Earnings , 1976 .

[9]  R. Gordon,et al.  The Output Cost of Disinflation in Traditional and Vector Autoregressive Models , 1982 .

[10]  Marshall S. Smith,et al.  Inequality: A Reassessment of the Effect of Family and Schooling in America , 1973 .

[11]  Mathew D. McCubbins,et al.  Presidential Influence on Congressional Appropriations Decisions , 1988 .

[12]  T. Edsall The new politics of inequality , 1984 .

[13]  R. Plotnick,et al.  How Income Transfer Programs Affect Work, Savings, and the Income Distribution: A Critical Review , 1981 .

[14]  R. Blank,et al.  Macroeconomics, Income Distribution, and Poverty , 1985 .

[15]  L. Belford,et al.  Equality in America , 1968 .

[16]  J. Alt Political Parties, World Demand, and Unemployment: Domestic and International Sources of Economic Activity , 1985, American Political Science Review.

[17]  H. Alker,et al.  On measuring inequality. , 1964, Behavioral science.

[18]  H. Chappell,et al.  Party Differences in Macroeconomic Policies and Outcomes , 1986 .

[19]  R. Musgrave,et al.  Public Finance in Theory and Practice , 1961 .

[20]  Robert Browning Presidents, Congress, and Policy Outcomes: U.S. Social Welfare Expenditures, 1949-77 , 1985 .

[21]  A. Moehlman,et al.  Inequality, A Reassessment of the Effect of Family and Schooling in America. , 1974 .

[22]  Michael A. H. Dempster,et al.  A Theory of the Budgetary Process , 1966, American Political Science Review.

[23]  G. Tullock Economics of income redistribution , 1982 .

[24]  D. Hibbs Political Parties and Macroeconomic Policies and Outcomes in the United States , 1986 .

[25]  H. Leonard,et al.  Who Paid the Taxes 1966-85? , 1985 .

[26]  A. Blinder,et al.  Macroeconomic Activity and Income Distribution in the Postwar United States , 1978 .

[27]  John Geweke,et al.  Inference and causality in economic time series models , 1984 .