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Senior Fellows/Fellows

Income Inequality, Productivity, and International Trade

This paper discusses the effect of income inequality on selection and aggregate productivity in a general equilibrium model with non-homothetic preferences. It shows the existence of a negative relationship between the number and quantity of products consumed by an income group and the earnings of other income groups. It also highlights the negative effect of mean-preserving spread of income on aggregate productivity through the softening of firms’ selection. This effect is however mitigated in the presence of international trade. In a quantitative analysis, it is shown that a too large mean-preserving spread of income may harm the rich as it raises firms’ markups on her purchases. This is contrary to the general belief that income inequality benefits the rich.
Keywords: Income inequality, productivity, International trade
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