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Title: Working, Consuming, and Dying: Quantifying the Diversity in the American Experience
Citation Type: Miscellaneous
Publication Year: 2021
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Abstract: We document how lifetime utility varies by demographic groups in the US and how these differences have evolved since the start of the 21st century. Using the equivalent variation as our measure of welfare we find that the standard deviation in cross-sectional well being between demographic groups is quite large at around 11 percent, which is comparable to the standard deviation of the logged annual income in prime earning years and more than double the standard deviation of logged consumption. Our metric includes consumption, leisure, mortality risk, and within-group inequality. The results are primarily driven by differences in consumption and life expectancy. Controlling for other demographics, welfare is increasing in educational attainment and is higher for women and those of Asian descent. This qualitative ordering is robust to classifying a broad measure of home production and child care as work and various definitions of real consumption. Finally, we show that changes in mortality rates associated with ‘deaths of despair’ disproportionately lower the welfare of less educated Whites.
Url: https://juliogarin.com/files/CGL_Welfare_Inequality.pdf
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Authors: Curtis, Chadwick; Garin, Julio; Lester, Robert
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Data Collections: IPUMS USA, IPUMS Time Use - ATUS
Topics: Fertility and Mortality, Race and Ethnicity, Work, Family, and Time
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