Really nice theoretical work, with a strong empirical support.

The irony is that investment wealth does better when more of it goes to people 
who need to spend it.





How Redistribution Makes America Richer - Evonomics
https://evonomics.com/how-redistribution-makes-america-richer/
(via Instapaper)

April 14, 2021
By Steve Roth

You hear a lot about bottom-up and middle-out economics these days, as 
antidotes to a half-century of “trickle-down” theorizing and rhetoric. You’re 
even hearing it, prominently, from Joe Biden.


They’re compelling ideas: put more wealth and income in the hands of millions, 
or hundreds of millions, and you’ll see more economic activity, more 
prosperity, and more widespread prosperity. To its proponents, it seems deeply 
intuitive or even obvious, a formula for The American Dream.

But curiously, you don’t find much nuts and bolts economic theory supporting 
that view of how economies work. There’s been lots of research on the sources 
and causes of wealth and income concentration. There’s been a lot of important 
work on the social and political effects of inequality — separate (though 
tightly related) issues. But unlike the steady stream of “incentive” theory 
from Right economists over decades, Left and heterodox economists have largely 
failed to ask or answer a rather basic theoretical (and empirical) question: 
what are the purely economic effects of highly-concentrated wealth, held by 
fewer people, families, and dynasties, in larger and larger fortunes?

In a new paper and model published in Real-World Economics Review, I try to 
tackle that question. The model takes advantage of national accountants’ wealth 
measures that have only been available since 2006 or 2012 (with coverage back 
to 1960), and measures of wealth distribution that were only published in 2019. 
Combined with thirty+ years of consistent survey data on consumer spending at 
different income levels, the paper derives a novel economic measure: velocity 
of wealth.


The bottom 80% group turns over its wealth in annual spending three or four 
times as fast as the top 20%. The arithmetic takeaway: at a given level of 
wealth, more broadly distributed wealth means more spending: the very stuff of 
economic activity, which is itself the ultimate source of wealth accumulation.

The details of the model are somewhat more complex, but it only employs five 
easy to understand formulas — all basically just arithmetic, and all expressed 
without resort to abstruse symbols; they use plain language.

How good are the model’s predictions? It starts with just two numbers in 1989 — 
the wealth of the top 20% and the bottom 80% — and extrapolates forward using 
those few formulas to predict levels of wealth, spending, and shares of wealth 
and spending, thirty years later.


Compare the model’s predictions for 2019 to actual results; in each case 
they’re almost identical.

It’s easy to add counterfactuals to this model: what would have happened if 
some percentage of top-20% wealth was transferred, redistributed, to the bottom 
80% every year over those three decades. The results are pretty eye-popping.


Downward redistribution appears to make everyone quite a lot wealthier, faster 
– especially (no surprise) the bottom 80%. Economic activity, annual spending, 
increases even faster. Taking the leftmost bars as an example: with an annual 
1.5% downward transfer, greater spending would have resulted in a 549% total 
wealth increase, versus actual 421%. (To put that 1.5% downward transfer in 
context: the compounding annual growth rate on a passive wealthholder’s 60/40 
stock/bond portfolio over that thirty years was about 7.5%. That’s all unearned 
income, received simply for holding wealth.)

Most of that extra wealth growth would have gone to the bottom 80% (wealth 
growth of 527% vs actual 295%), while top-20% wealth growth would also have 
been slightly higher than actual (526% vs 499%). The top-20% share of wealth 
would have remained unchanged, versus the actual share increase, from 61% to 
71%.

With 1.5% in downward redistribution, 2019’s total consumption spending — a 
pretty good index or proxy for GDP — would have been 52% higher. Total wealth 
would have been 16% higher.

It’s worth noting: excepting the two leftmost scenarios (1.5% and 1.2%), the 
top 20% keep getting relatively richer than the bottom 80%. Avoiding the 
increased wealth concentration that we’ve seen since 1989 (or even reducing the 
1989 concentration) would have required at least an annual 1.2–1.5% downward 
wealth transfer from the top 20%.

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The very richest percentile groups, of course, might not have gotten richer 
with downward redistribution. It would depend on the mechanics and 
progressivity of the transfers. The data available here don’t let us determine 
that using this model. But the transfers would have to be far larger than 
envisioned here before top-percentile wealth levels (vs their relative share) 
actually stagnated or declined. Absent quite extreme redistribution, the rich 
keep getting richer as the economy grows. But with adequate redistribution to 
counter the ever-present trend toward economy-crippling wealth concentration, 
everybody else prospers as well.

The paper, model, data, and all calculations are available here.

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