40% of Fortune 500 companies were started by immigrants or children of immigrants: https://t.co/A1BkiACZLW
— American Progress (@amprog) July 25, 2015
40% of Fortune 500 companies were started by immigrants or children of immigrants
02 Aug 2015 Leave a comment
in economic history, entrepreneurship, industrial organisation, survivor principle Tags: creative destruction, economics of immigration, entrepreneurial alertness, top 1%
Trigger warning for the Twitter Left
31 Jul 2015 Leave a comment
in applied price theory, applied welfare economics, constitutional political economy, income redistribution, politics - Australia, politics - New Zealand, politics - USA, Public Choice, public economics, rentseeking Tags: antimarket bias, endogenous growth theory, expressive voting, laffer curve, Leftover Left, taxation and entrepreneurship, taxation and human capital, taxation and investment, taxation and the labour supply, top 1%, Twitter left
Why hasn’t the Occupy Wall Street movement protested against this?
29 Jul 2015 Leave a comment
in sports economics Tags: CEO pay, Occupy Wall Street, superstar wages, superstars, top 0.1%, top 1%
Rising incomes in sports: Top salaries in baseball & basketball are higher than in football
bit.ly/1DEfFtc http://t.co/DUyJld5iah—
Max Roser (@MaxCRoser) July 21, 2015
The rising incomes of major league baseball players since 1890
Part of the inequality story in the USBy @VisualEcon http://t.co/m5GgaKGwSv—
Max Roser (@MaxCRoser) July 19, 2015
The occupations of the top 1% and the top 0.1%
29 Jul 2015 Leave a comment
in applied price theory, applied welfare economics, entrepreneurship, financial economics, human capital, labour economics, occupational choice Tags: CEO pay, compensating differentials, entrepreneurial alertness, top 0.1%, top 1%, top income earners, top wage earners
Page 41 from "An Illustrated Guide to Income" more economic #dataviz at: bit.ly/11v2e9k http://t.co/7Hlgk4AjZn—
Catherine Mulbrandon (@VisualEcon) May 22, 2013
More evidence on the rise and rise of the working super rich – the top income earners are top wage earners now
28 Jul 2015 Leave a comment
in economic history, economics of education, entrepreneurship, financial economics, human capital, labour supply, occupational choice, politics - USA Tags: creative destruction, entrepreneurial alertness, top 1%, top income earners, top wage earners
Page 47 from "An Illustrated Guide to Income" more economic #dataviz at: bit.ly/10QWgyR http://t.co/d1dhSYKWDC—
Catherine Mulbrandon (@VisualEcon) June 03, 2013
Why did the top 1% only pick on men in the great wage stagnation?
27 Jul 2015 Leave a comment
in discrimination, economic history, gender, labour economics Tags: middle class stagnation, reversing gender gap, top 1%, wage stagnation
Average & median incomes diverged more for men than for women as income inequaltiy grew bit.ly/16XXzQq http://t.co/Tp0IAXqxH8—
Catherine Mulbrandon (@VisualEcon) August 20, 2013
Gary Becker and Kevin Murphy on inequality and growth in living standards
23 Jul 2015 Leave a comment

Fact checking @StaceyKirkNZ & @armchair_critic @Income_Equality: How NZ is one of the worst in the world – updated
23 Jul 2015 1 Comment
in discrimination, gender, labour economics, labour supply, politics - New Zealand, poverty and inequality, public economics, Rawls and Nozick, urban economics Tags: child poverty, difference principle, distributive justice, family poverty, green rent seeking, housing prices, land prices, land supply, Leftover Left, NIMBYs, top 1%
Last May, the Dominion Post had a feature on how New Zealand inequality was amongst the worst in the world:
Rising inequality has been the norm in most developed countries, but few have seen it increase by as much as New Zealand.
Since the 1980s, New Zealand’s inequality – which had been low by OECD standards – drew closer to levels seen in more unequal countries like the United States.
They support this claim with a Gini Coefficient chart that I’ve been unable to source at the OECD. I therefore use another that is freely available in New Zealand and which I have used in the past. My data source on the Gini coefficient has the advantage of been a complete series back to the early 1980s rather than five yearly observations in the OECD data sourced by the Dominion Post.
Figure 1: Inequality in New Zealand and the OECD trend: the Gini coefficient
Source: Bryan Perry, Household incomes in New Zealand: Trends in indicators of inequality and hardship 1982 to 2013. Ministry of Social Development (July 2014), Figure J5.
Figure 1 shows there is no evidence of a substantive rise or fall in inequality in New Zealand since the mid 1990s. Nearly all of the increase in inequality was in the late 1980s and early 1990s. Not mentioning that nearly all of the increase was in a short period leads to a poor understanding of the data before their readers. Rising inequality is not an on-going problem in New Zealand. There was a large rise in inequality in the late 1980s and early 1990s.
The next figure that I’ve been able to reproduce is the income shares of the top 10%, top 5%, top 1% on top 0.5% income earners in New Zealand – see figure 2.
Figure 2: Top Income Shares, New Zealand
Source: top incomes-parisschoolofeconomics.
Our intrepid reporters in the Dominion Post claim that figure 2 shows that:
In 1986, the top 10 per cent took home 26.5 per cent of New Zealand’s income. In 1999, it was 37.8 per cent and in 2004, it was 33.2 per cent.
Oddly enough, our intrepid reporters decided to stop at 2004 for no particular reason. They also chose to truncate their chart at 1986 for no particular reason other than to lead the coincidence that the top 10% income shares were higher in the 1960s and 1970s that now– see figure 2 . That is, the top 10% in New Zealand earned more in the days before the scourge of neoliberalism came upon the New Zealand then after it – see figure 2. This detail was worth disclosing. Did neoliberalism reduce the income divide in New Zealand between the top 10% and the rest? Figure 2 suggests that it did.
The best that veteran grumbler Max Rashbrooke could spin to make these good old days of higher inequality than now to look like good old days before the scourge of neoliberalism beset New Zealand was to ignore the fortunes of the majority of the population in his dewy eyed view of his childhood:
New Zealand up until the 1980s was fairly egalitarian, apart from Māori and women, our increasing income gap started in the late 1980s and early 1990s
A more worthy analysis of figure 2 is to note that top income shares in New Zealand haven’t changed that much except for a bit of a spike in the late 1980s. This increase in inequality in New Zealand in the late 1980s and early 1990s – see figures 1 and 2 – was quickly followed by a long economic boom – see figure 3.
Figure 3: Real GDP per New Zealander and Australian aged 15-64, 2014 US$ (converted to 2014 price level with updated 2011 PPPs), 1.9 per cent detrended, 1956-2013
Source: Computed from OECD Stat Extract and The Conference Board. 2015. The Conference Board Total Economy Database™, May 2015, http://www.conference-board.org/data/economydatabase/
This boom after next to two decades of minimal real economic growth per working age New Zealander benefited everyone and, for example, the unemployment rate fell to a record low of 3.5% about 2005. The supposedly more egalitarian 1970s and 1980s were lost decades of growth – see figure 3.
Figure 4: Real equivalised median household income (before housing costs) by ethnicity, 1988 to 2013 ($2013)
Source: Bryan Perry, Household incomes in New Zealand: Trends in indicators of inequality and hardship 1982 to 2013. Ministry of Social Development (July 2014).
As shown in figure 4, between 1994 and 2010, real equivalised median New Zealand Pakeha household income rose by 47%; for Māori, this rise was 68%; for Pasifika, the rise in real equivalised median household income was 77%. These trends pass the difference principle developed by John Rawls.
The large improvements in Māori incomes since 1992 were based on rising Māori employment rates, fewer Māori on benefits or zero incomes, more Māori moving into higher paying jobs, and greater Māori educational attainment (Dixon and Maré 2007). Labour force participation rates of Māori increased from 45% in the late 1980s to about 62% in the last few years. Māori unemployment reached a 20-year low of 8 per cent from 2005 to 2008. That and the return of wages growth after years of stagnation as shown in figure 5 is something to celebrate.
Figure 5: real GDP per capita an average real wage, 1965 – 2014, New Zealand
Source: Council of Trade Unions.
The reporters in the Dominion Post also fell for the recent OECD analysis suggesting a connection between economic growth and inequality:
One study by the OECD suggests rising inequality was responsible for wiping a third off New Zealand’s economic growth in the past 30 years
It estimated the rate of New Zealand’s GDP growth was stunted by as much as 15.5 percentage points between 1990 and 2010 – more than any other OECD economy.
The analysis of the OECD depended crucially upon how greater inequality reduces the ability of the lower income families to invest in human capital:
The evidence strongly suggests that high inequality hinders the ability of individuals from low economic background to invest in their human capital, both in terms of the level of education but even more importantly in terms of the quality of education.
The OECD theory of inequality and lower growth is there is a financing constraint because of inequality that reduces economic growth because of less human capital accumulation by lower income families.

The OECD put a lot of their growth inequality nexus eggs in one basket. The OECD was implying that student loans and other government interventions are not closing credit constraints on financing higher education despite decades of rapidly rising tertiary education attainment, which is partially illustrated in figure 6.
Figure 6: tertiary educational degree attainment (%), New Zealanders aged 25–34, 2000-2013
Source: OECD StatExtract.
This is interesting because in 2002, with Pedro Carneiro, James Heckman showed that lack of credit is not a major constraint on the ability of young Americans to attend college. They found that credit constraints prevent, at most, 4% of the U.S. population from attending. Credit constraints is weakening as a rationale for a lack of an accumulation of human capital, and can be easily solved.
Another difficulty for the OECD is the increase in inequality in New Zealand was, as noted before in figures 1 and 2, in the late 1980s and 1990s. To blame low economic growth to the tune of 15 percentage points on events of some 25 or 30 years ago is a long bow.
Higher education has been free for the low income families for several generations. Student loans are readily available. It is hard to believe that such a readily solvable problem is a major source of inequality and lower growth. Moreover, as Aghion said:
Economists and others have proposed many channels through which education may affect growth–not merely the private returns to individuals’ greater human capital but also a variety of externalities.
For highly developed countries, the most frequently discussed externality is education investments’ fostering technological innovation, thereby making capital and labour more productive, generating income growth.
Despite the enormous interest in the relationship between education and growth, the evidence is fragile at best.
The 15 percentage point reduction in New Zealand economic growth since the late 1980s because of inequality is so large over a 30 year period that this half a percentage point reduction on average per annum qualifies as an independent source of business cycle shocks and an equally implausible driver of real business cycles.
Our intrepid reporters closed by claiming large increases in child poverty:
In December last year, the second annual Child Poverty Monitor showed a slight decrease in the number of Kiwi children living in income poverty, from 27 per cent to 24 per cent. But 30 years ago, it was 14 per cent.
Figure 7 below shows their numbers, which is child poverty in New Zealand for poverty thresholds of 60% relative to a contemporary median measured both before and after housing costs.
Figure 7: % child poverty in New Zealand (before and after housing costs), 60% relative to contemporary median, 1982 – 2013
Source: Bryan Perry, Household incomes in New Zealand: Trends in indicators of inequality and hardship 1982 to 2013. Ministry of Social Development (July 2014), Tables F.6 and F.7.
The first thing to notice in figure 7 is before housing costs child poverty has been pretty stable for 30 years the New Zealand. Few celebrate this.
Figure 7 does show a large increase in after housing costs child poverty in the late 1980s. Since the early 1990s, after housing costs child poverty has slowly tapered down from the high 30% in the mid-1990s to 24% now – see figure 7.
In the longer run after housing costs child poverty rates in 2013 were close to double what they were in the late 1980s mainly because housing costs in 2013 were much higher relative to income than they were in the late 1980s.
– Bryan Perry, 2014 Household Incomes Report – Key Findings. Ministry of Social Development (July 2014).
Before housing costs child poverty in recent years as been the same as it was in 1982 – see figure 7. Although there were large cuts in the social security benefits in the 1991 mother of all budgets in New Zealand, before housing child poverty increased to 25% but was back to 20% by the mid 1990s.
As figure 7 shows, the problem was not income, but the rising costs of housing that had to be paid out of benefits and wages. The Left over Left will not let go of the 1991 benefit cuts even 25 years later despite the fact that the issue was rising housing costs rather than perpetually higher before housing costs child poverty.

The problem is not income, it is rising costs of housing. Increasing wages and benefits will not solve that if more money is simply chasing the same limited stock of land and urban housing.

A proper comparison of the diverging trends in figure 7 between before housing costs child poverty and after housing costs child poverty rates since 1982 gives a much clearer picture of what is increasing child poverty. It is rising housing costs as a result of regulation on the supply of new urban land.
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Source: OECD Better Life Index.
The driver of inequality in New Zealand is government regulation of the land supply – policies supported by the middle-class and the left-wing parties. Rising inequality is not inequality between high and low income earners as suggested by the Dominion Post.
Fact Checking @Income_Equality – child poverty in 2014 was at 24% compared to 14% in 1982
22 Jul 2015 Leave a comment
in applied welfare economics, economic history, labour economics, politics - New Zealand, population economics, poverty and inequality, urban economics Tags: child poverty, family poverty, green rent seeking, housing prices, land prices, land supply, Leftover Left, NIMBYs, top 1%
Closing The Gap – The Income Equality Project said today that “child poverty in New Zealand in 2014 was 24% as compared 14% in 1982”. What do they mean by this and what, importantly, does this trend imply for problem definition for child poverty policy?
Figure 1 below shows their numbers, which is child poverty in New Zealand after housing costs for poverty thresholds of 60% relative to a contemporary median as calculated by the Ministry of Social Development’s Brian Perry – the New Zealand expert on these matters.
Figure 1: % child poverty in New Zealand (before and after housing costs), 60% relative to contemporary median, 1982 – 2013
Source: Bryan Perry, Household incomes in New Zealand: Trends in indicators of inequality and hardship 1982 to 2013. Ministry of Social Development (July 2014), Tables F.6 and F.7.
The first thing to notice is, which is important, in figure 1 is before housing costs child poverty under the 60% relative to the contemporary median poverty threshold chosen by Closing The Gap – The Income Equality Project has been pretty stable for 30 years the New Zealand. Crisis, what crisis?
The top 1%’s New Zealand branch has not being doing its job – see figure 2. The New Zealand top 1% has failed miserably in further oppressing the proletariat, extracting more and more of their labour surplus, and grinding working class children into deeper and deeper poverty to increase their already excessive incomes – see figure 2. You’re fired as the until recently registered Democrat Donald Trump would say.
Figure 2: top income shares, New Zealand, Australia and USA
Source: top incomes-parisschoolofeconomics
Before housing costs child poverty has not risen for 30 years as shown in figure 1, which is the chosen threshold of child poverty of the Closing The Gap – The Income Equality Project.
The story about trends in child poverty is very different for child poverty when after housing costs child poverty rates are estimated – see figure 1.
Figure 1 shows a large increase in after housing costs child poverty in New Zealand in the late 1980s when there was a deep recession and double-digit unemployment. Since the early 1990s, as figure 1 shows, after housing costs child poverty has slowly tapered down from the high 30% in the mid-1990s to 24% now and that is despite the global financial crisis, which was the top 1%’s fault if the Left over Left is to be believed.
For before housing costs child poverty – as can be seen from figure 1 – there was an increase in child poverty before housing costs when there was a deep recession at the end of the 1980s. After before housing costs child poverty is now the same as it was both 20 and 30 years ago – see figure 1 .
In the longer run after housing costs child poverty rates in 2013 were close to double what they were in the late 1980s mainly because housing costs in 2013 were much higher relative to income than they were in the late 1980s.
– Bryan Perry, 2014 Household Incomes Report – Key Findings. Ministry of Social Development (July 2014).
Now to the rub. If it is after housing costs child poverty that has risen in New Zealand and stayed high, as it has, the focus should be on what factors are driving up housing costs rather than what factors are driving down wages and incomes of ordinary worker. Before housing costs child poverty is no worse than it was 20 and 30 years ago – see figure 1.
New QV figures show Auckland house prices are up a massive 16.1% on last year, now estimated to reach $1m by Aug '16. http://t.co/DwAU79ozCy—
New Zealand Labour (@nzlabour) June 09, 2015
The cause of the large increase in housing costs and housing prices is abundantly clear. Restrictions on the supply of land that result from the Resource Management Act and policies made under that law such as the Auckland urban limit. That is the proper problem definition for public policy. Restrictions on land supply is driving up child poverty because more and more of the incomes of the poor is housing costs.
Source: Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas.
The most straightforward and fastest way of reducing child poverty and family poverty in New Zealand is lowering housing costs through deregulation of land supply.

Land supply deregulation is well within the realm of public policy choice. Parliament cannot legislate wage increases without accompanying productivity increases, but it can reduce restrictions on the supply of land as a result of the Resource Management Act.
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Any discussion of child poverty and family poverty in New Zealand should refer to trends in both before and after housing cost in child poverty.
Will the Govt intervene in Auckland's housing crisis? Or will home ownership become a preserve of the wealthy? http://t.co/CK2AnCeuYB—
Green Party NZ (@NZGreens) February 05, 2015
A comparison of these diverging trends between before housing cost and after housing costs child poverty rates since 1982 gives a much clearer picture of what is increasing child poverty. The cause is housing costs as a result of ever tightening regulation on the supply of new urban land and in particular in Auckland at the behest of the middle-class voters courted by the Greens and Labour Party. It is the left-wing parties in New Zealand which opposed the most practical steps to reduce child poverty, which is land supply deregulation.
The top 400 income tax returns in the USA
20 Jul 2015 Leave a comment
The top 0.000003% in the US
by @VisualEcon http://t.co/eHmUrWzp6X—
Max Roser (@MaxCRoser) July 16, 2015
Equality lacks relevance if the poor are growing richer
17 Jul 2015 Leave a comment
in development economics, economic history, growth disasters, growth miracles, liberalism Tags: capitalism and freedom, Deirdre McCloskey, life expectancies, The Great Enrichment, The Great Escape, The Great Fact, top 1%
How to argue for inequality and neoliberalism when arguing dead set against it
17 Jul 2015 Leave a comment
in economic growth, economic history, human capital, income redistribution, labour economics, labour supply, politics - New Zealand, poverty and inequality, Public Choice, rentseeking Tags: Leftover Left, neoliberalism, top 1%
On 12 August last, Closer Together New Zealand posted a chart showing average hourly wages had been stagnant for 20 years and then started growing again in 1993. Closer Together New Zealand then rounded up the usual suspects of the Left over Left.
Later that month in a comment on that post, a chart was posted showing that inequality had been increasing quite rapidly in the late 1980s and early 1990s in New Zealand. There were a range of economic reforms Closer Together New Zealand didn’t like in the late 1980s and early 1990s.
Closer Together New Zealand did not notice their second chart showed there had been a large increase in inequality, and their first chart showed that this was followed by the return of regular average hourly wages after 20 years of stagnation.
I am not so vulgar as to suggest correlation is causation, but it is amusing to watch that one day a chart is posted showing a resumption of wages growth after 20 years of wage stagnation and the next day a chart is posted showing that the major economic developments in the preceding years were a large increase in inequality and substantial economic liberalisation.
To add to my amusement, a companion site Inequality A New Zealand Conversation posted a chart showing the top 1% had not had much at all in income growth for the last 20 years while most everyone else had. This spike in the incomes of the top 1% prior to about 1994 was followed by the resumption in average wages growth after 1994.
And the rich got richer, who cares
16 Jul 2015 Leave a comment
in applied price theory, applied welfare economics, Austrian economics, comparative institutional analysis, constitutional political economy, development economics, economic history, economics of bureaucracy, economics of education, economics of regulation, economics of religion, energy economics, entrepreneurship, environmental economics, financial economics, growth disasters, growth miracles, income redistribution, industrial organisation, international economics, labour economics, labour supply, liberalism, poverty and inequality, Public Choice, rentseeking, survivor principle, transport economics, urban economics Tags: Deirdre McCloskey, entrepreneurial alertness, The Great Enrichment, The Great Escape, The Great Fact, top 1%
"The rich got richer, true. But…" —@DeirdreMcClosk buff.ly/1Imdv4o http://t.co/M3ERx3JTIn—
HumanProgress.org (@humanprogress) June 28, 2015
Has NZ child poverty doubled as @MaxRashbrooke said?
09 Jul 2015 1 Comment
in applied welfare economics, economic history, economics of regulation, labour economics, law and economics, politics - New Zealand, poverty and inequality, property rights Tags: Auckland urban limit, child poverty, Director's Law, expressive voting, family poverty, family tax credits, in-work tax credits, land use planning, median voter theorm, rational ignorance, rational irrationality, RMA, top 1%, working for families
Lindsay Mitchell put me onto a quote by veteran grumbler Max Rashbrooke that the child poverty rate doubled in New Zealand:
In a system where income goes disproportionately to the already well-off, ordinary workers are missing out on the rewards of their efforts, to the tune of billions of dollars a year. Welfare benefits, cut by a quarter in 1991 and increased just 8 per cent in the last budget, are far too low to meet people’s basic needs.
The result is a doubling of child poverty and the return of childhood diseases unknown in most developed countries – a national embarrassment, as one researcher described it.
Poverty, income and inequality data is collected in loving detail by Brian Perry every year for the Ministry of Social Development.
Figure 1: % child poverty in New Zealand (before and after housing costs), 60% 1998 median constant value, 1982 – 2013
Source: Bryan Perry, Household incomes in New Zealand: Trends in indicators of inequality and hardship 1982 to 2013. Ministry of Social Development (July 2014), Tables F.6 and F.7.
The only thing noticeable in the downward trend in child poverty in New Zealand since its doubling with the sharp recession in 1990 with double-digit unemployment rates is child poverty stop falling shortly after in-work family tax credits were introduced in the form of Working for Families in 2005.
New QV figures show Auckland house prices are up a massive 16.1% on last year, now estimated to reach $1m by Aug '16. http://t.co/DwAU79ozCy—
New Zealand Labour (@nzlabour) June 09, 2015
There was a break in trend in the long decline in child poverty as soon as in-work family tax credits were introduced in New Zealand. I’m sure this is a coincidence because, as Brian Perry said when discussing the introduction of Working for Families in 2005:
The 2004 to 2007 period was the only one in the 25 years to 2007 in which the incomes of low- to middle-income households grew more quickly than those of households above the median.
The real killer in New Zealand in terms of poverty and inequality are housing costs. Housing costs are wholly under the control of government through its control of the supply of land, which is restricted at the behest of the parties of the left.
Figure 2: real equivalised household incomes (before and after housing costs): changes at the top of lowest income decile, New Zealand, 1982 to 2013
Source: Bryan Perry, Household incomes in New Zealand: Trends in indicators of inequality and hardship 1982 to 2013. Ministry of Social Development (July 2014), tables D.2 and D.4.
Figure 2 shows that real equivalised household income after housing costs has not grown and in fact has fallen for the bottom 10% of the income distribution in New Zealand.
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It is the left-wing parties who oppose measures to reduce housing costs and and increase the supply of land through reforms to the Resource Management Act and the relaxation of the Auckland metropolitan urban limit.

Labour and the Greens are in effect keeping the poor poor to win middle-class votes.
Figure 3: real equivalised household incomes (before and after housing costs): changes at the top of the top, middle and lowest lowest income deciles, New Zealand, 1982 to 2013
Source: Bryan Perry, Household incomes in New Zealand: Trends in indicators of inequality and hardship 1982 to 2013. Ministry of Social Development (July 2014), tables D.2 in D.4.
Figure 3 shows that those in the middle and higher deciles, a political territory rich in swinging voters, are still doing well after housing costs. The parties of the left are collaborating with a middle-class home owning voter while betraying the working class and its aspirations from home ownership and quite simply affordable housing costs when they rent.
The increases for all groups may be understated by the inability of living standards measures to adequately account for new goods, product upgrades and rising life expectancies.

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