Wealth Disparities Before and After the Great Recession

First Published September 25, 2013 Research Article Find in PubMed

The collapse of the labor, housing, and stock markets beginning in 2007 created unprecedented challenges for American families. This study examines disparities in wealth holdings leading up to the Great Recession and during the first years of the recovery. All socioeconomic groups experienced declines in wealth following the recession, with higher wealth families experiencing larger absolute declines. In percentage terms, however, the declines were greater for less advantaged groups as measured by minority status, education, and prerecession income and wealth, leading to a substantial rise in wealth inequality in just a few years. Despite large changes in wealth, longitudinal analyses demonstrate little change in mobility in the ranking of particular families in the wealth distribution. Between 2007 and 2011, one-fourth of American families lost at least 75 percent of their wealth, and more than half of all families lost at least 25 percent of their wealth. Multivariate longitudinal analyses document that these large relative losses were disproportionally concentrated among lower-income, less educated, and minority households.

Bosworth, Barry . 2012. Economic consequences of the Great Recession. Evidence from the Panel Study of Income Dynamics. Center for Retirement Research at Boston College Working Paper 2012-4, Boston, MA.
Google Scholar | Crossref
Bricker, Jesse, Kennickell, Arthur B., Moore, Kevin B., Sabelhaus, John. 2012. Changes in U.S. family finances from 2007 to 2010. Evidence from the Survey of Consumer Finances. Federal Reserve Bulletin 98 (2): 180.
Google Scholar
Bridges, Thomas, Stafford, Frank. 2012. At the corner of Main and Wall Street: Family pension response to liquidity change and perceived returns. Michigan Retirement Research Center Working Paper, Ann Arbor, MI.
Google Scholar | Crossref
Bucks, Brian, Moore, Kevin. 2012. The Great Recessions’ varied effects on household well-being and its consequences for inequality. Paper presented at the general conference of the International Association for Research in Income and Wealth, 5–11 August, Boston, MA.
Google Scholar
Emmons, William R., Noeth, Bryan J. 2012. Household financial stability: Who suffered the most from the crisis? The Regional Economist (July):1117.
Google Scholar
Freeman, Richard B. 2013. Failing the test? The flexible U.S. jobs market in the Great Recession. The ANNALS of the American Academy of Political and Social Science, this volume.
Google Scholar
Gottschalck, Alfred, Vornovitsky, Marina, Smith, Adam. 2013. Household wealth in the U.S.: 2000 to 2011. U.S. Census Bureau press release, March.
Google Scholar
Gouskova, Elena, Stafford, Frank. 2009. Trends in household wealth dynamics, 2005–2007. PSID Technical Paper 09-03, Ann Arbor, MI.
Google Scholar
Hout, Michael, Levanon, Asaf, Cumberworth, Erin. 2011. Job loss and unemployment. In The Great Recession, eds. Grusky, David B., Western, Bruce, Wimer, Christopher 59126. New York, NY: Russell Sage Foundation.
Google Scholar
Hoynes, Hilary, Miller, Douglas L, Schaller, Jessamyn. 2012. Who suffers during recessions? Journal of Economic Perspectives 26 (3): 2748.
Google Scholar | Crossref | ISI
Juster, F. Thomas, Smith, James P., Stafford, Frank. 1999. The measurement and structure of household wealth. Labour Economics 6 (2): 25375.
Google Scholar | Crossref
Keister, Lisa A. 2000. Wealth in America: Trends in wealth inequality. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Google Scholar | Crossref
Keister, Lisa A., Moller, Stephanie. 2000. Wealth inequality in the United States. Annual Review of Sociology 26:6381.
Google Scholar | Crossref | ISI
Kennickell, Arthur B. 2000. Wealth measurement in the Survey of Consumer Finances: Methodology and directions for future research. Finance and Economic Discussion Paper, Federal Reserve Board, Washington, DC.
Google Scholar
Kennickell, Arthur B. 2009. Ponds and streams: Wealth and income in the U.S., 1989 to 2007. Finance and Economic Discussion Paper, Federal Reserve Board, Washington, DC.
Google Scholar | Crossref
Kennickell, Arthur B. 2011. Tossed and turned: Wealth dynamics of U.S. households 2007–2009. Finance and Economic Discussion Paper, Federal Reserve Board, Washington, DC.
Google Scholar | Crossref
Kennickell, Arthur B. 2012. The other, other half: Changes in the finances of the least wealthy 50 percent, 2007–2009. Finance and Economic Discussion Paper, Federal Reserve Board, Washington, DC.
Google Scholar | Crossref
Klevmarken, N. Anders, Lupton, Joseph P., Stafford, Frank P. 2003. Wealth dynamics in the 1980s and 1990s. Journal of Human Resources 38 (2): 32253.
Google Scholar | Crossref | ISI
Mian, Atif, Sufi, Amir. 2011. House prices, home equity-based borrowing, and the U.S. household leverage crisis. American Economic Review 101 (5): 213256.
Google Scholar | Crossref | ISI
Ohlsson, Henry, Roine, Jesper, Waldenström, Daniel. 2008. Long-run changes in the concentration of wealth: An overview of recent findings. In Personal wealth from a global perspective, ed. Davies, James B. 4263. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
Google Scholar | Crossref
Oliver, Melvin L., Shapiro, Thomas M. 1997. Black wealth, white wealth: A new perspective on racial inequality. New York, NY: Routledge.
Google Scholar
Owens, Lindsay A., Wimer, Christopher. 2013. The dynamics of mortgage debt in the wake of the Great Recession. Unpublished manuscript.
Google Scholar
Panel Study of Income Dynamics . 2003. Public Use Dataset. Produced and distributed by the Institute for Social Research, Survey Research Center, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI.
Google Scholar
Pfeffer, Fabian T., Danziger, Sheldon, Schoeni, Robert F. 2013. Wealth inequality and the Great Recession. Research Summary. New York, NY and Stanford, CA: Russell Sage Foundation and The Stanford Center on Poverty and Inequality.
Google Scholar
Pfeffer, Fabian T., Schoeni, Robert F., Andreski, Patricia. 2013. A comparison of wealth estimates based on the 2007 Panel Study of Income Dynamics and the 2007 Survey of Consumer Finances. PSID Technical Paper, Ann Arbor, MI.
Google Scholar
Scholz, Karl John, Levine, Kara. 2004. U.S. black-white wealth inequality. In Social inequality, ed. Neckerman, Kathryn M. 895929. New York, NY: Russell Sage Foundation.
Google Scholar
Shammas, Carole . 1993. A new look at long-term trends in wealth inequality in the United States. American Historical Review 98 (2): 41231.
Google Scholar | Crossref | ISI
Shapiro, Thomas, Meschede, Tatjana, Osoro, Sam. 2013. The roots of the widening racial wealth gap: Explaining the black-white economic divide. Institute on Assets and Social Policy Research and Policy Brief, Brandeis University, Waltham, MA.
Google Scholar
Smeeding, Timothy M., Thompson, Jeffrey P., Levanon, Asaf, Burak, Esra. 2011. Poverty and income inequality in the early stages of the Great Recession. In The Great Recession, eds. Grusky, David B., Western, Bruce, Wimer, Christopher, 82126. New York, NY: Russell Sage Foundation.
Google Scholar
Solon, Gary . 1992. Intergenerational income mobility in the United States. American Economic Review 82 (3): 393408.
Google Scholar | ISI
Stafford, Frank, Chen, Bing, Schoeni, Robert. 2012. Mortgage distress and financial liquidity: How U.S. families are handling savings, mortgages and other debts. PSID Technical Paper 12-02, Ann Arbor, MI.
Google Scholar
Taylor, Paul, Kochhar, Rakesh, Fry, Richard, Velasco, Gabriel, Motel, Seth. 2011. Wealth gaps rise to record highs between whites, blacks and Hispanics. Pew Research Center Social & Demographic Trends. Washington, DC: Pew Research Center.
Google Scholar
Wolff, Edward N. 1995. Top heavy: A study of the increasing inequality of wealth in America. New York, NY: Twentieth Century Fund Press.
Google Scholar
Wolff, Edward N. 2006. Changes in household wealth in the 1980s and 1990s in the United States. In International perspectives on household wealth, ed. Wolff, Edward N. 10750. Cheltenham, UK: Edward Elgar.
Google Scholar | Crossref
Wolff, Edward N. 2010. Recent trends in household wealth in the United States: Rising debt and the middle-class squeeze. An update to 2007. Levy Economics Institute Working Paper 589, Bard College, Annandale-on-Hudson, NY.
Google Scholar | Crossref
Wolff, Edward N., Owens, Lindsay A., Burak, Esra. 2011. How much wealth was destroyed in the Great Recession? In The Great Recession, eds. Grusky, David B., Western, Bruce, Wimer, Christopher, 12758. New York, NY: Russell Sage Foundation.
Google Scholar

Access content

To read the fulltext, please use one of the options below to sign in or purchase access.
  • Access Options

    My Account

    Welcome
    You do not have access to this content.

    Chinese Institutions / 中国用户

    Click the button below for the full-text content

    请点击以下获取该全文

    Institutional Access

    does not have access to this content.

    Purchase Content

    24 hours online access to download content

    Research off-campus without worrying about access issues. Find out about Lean Library here


Purchase

ANN-article-ppv for $37.50
Single Issue 24 hour E-access for $238.22

Cookies Notification

This site uses cookies. By continuing to browse the site you are agreeing to our use of cookies. Find out more.
Top