Maria Grazia Pittau
Sapienza Universita' di Roma
Testing for the changes in the shape of income distribution: Italian evidence in the 1990s from kernel density estimates
Abstract
By using
nonparametric methods, this paper estimates the distribution of
both household and size-adjusted real income in Italy between
1987– 1998. Because of data sparseness in the distribution, an
adaptive bandwidth is used, while to account for sample design a
weighting variable is incorporated in the estimation procedure.
The time invariance and the presence of modes in the
distributions are tested by means of a nonparametric test and a
bootstrap test, respectively. The empirical results suggest that
the Italian income distribution significantly changed over time.
During the eighties the density shifted rightwards, positively
affecting the well being of a large fraction of Italian
households. The 1993 recession altered the shape of income
distribution increasing inequality and polarisation, and the
following period of slow recovery did not show significant
changes in the shape of distribution in terms of relative income
with a consequent permanence of inequality.
The polarisation of the distribution is more noticeable for
size-adjusted income rather than whole household income,
reflecting the influence of family size on income shape.
Empirical Economics, 29, 2, 415--430, 2004.
