Top Earners: Cross-Country Facts

July 19, 2018

Abstract

We provide a common set of life cycle earnings statistics based on administrative data from the United States, Canada, Denmark, and Sweden. We find three qualitative patterns, which are common across countries. First, top-earnings inequality increases over the working lifetime. Second, the extreme right tail of the earnings distribution becomes thicker with age over the working lifetime. Third, top lifetime earners exhibit dramatic earnings growth over their working lifetime. Models of top earners should account for these three patterns and, importantly, for how they quantitatively differ across countries.

About the Authors
Alejandro Badel

Alejandro Badel was an economist at the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis.

Alejandro Badel

Alejandro Badel was an economist at the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis.

Moira Daly

Moira Daly is a senior advisor at Copenhagen Business School.

Moira Daly

Moira Daly is a senior advisor at Copenhagen Business School.

Mark Huggett

Mark Huggett is a professor at Georgetown University.

Mark Huggett

Mark Huggett is a professor at Georgetown University.

Martin Nybom

Martin Nybom is an associate professor at the Institute for Evaluation of Labour Market and Education Policy.

Martin Nybom

Martin Nybom is an associate professor at the Institute for Evaluation of Labour Market and Education Policy.

Editors in Chief
Michael Owyang and Juan Sanchez

This journal of scholarly research delves into monetary policy, macroeconomics, and more. Views expressed are not necessarily those of the St. Louis Fed or Federal Reserve System. View the full archive (pre-2018).


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