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Growing wealth, inequality, and housing in the United States

Growing wealth, inequality, and housing in the United States2007

Xiao Di Zhu

About this book

The rapid growth of household wealth in the United States has been accompanied by drastic growing inequality. This paper discusses both wealth and inequality growth, examines demographic factors behind the growth, and analyzes housing's role in it, using the Survey of Consumer Finances data collected by the Federal Reserve Bank. While aggregate household net wealth grew from $25.9 trillion in 1995 to $50.1 trillion in 2004 (both in 2004 dollars), nearly 90 percent of the net gains occurred only among the top quartile of households in wealth distribution. Although housing wealth (both home equality and housing value) was still more evenly distributed than other types of wealth, it largely served to widen the wealth gap rather than to narrow it during the last decade.

Details

First published
2007
OL Work ID
OL39785886W

Subjects

HousingWealthHome ownershipEconomic aspectsEqualityIncome distributionPersonal FinanceHome economics

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Book data from Open Library. Cover images courtesy of Open Library.