Stock Market Participation, Work from Home, and Inequality

DIW Discussion Papers 2138, 57 S.

Lorenz Meister, Lukas Menkhoff, Carsten Schröder

2025

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Published in: International Review of Financial Analysis 107 (2025)

Abstract

Stock market participation among working household heads jumped upwards in 2020 – in Germany by about 25%. A major cause is the required use of work from home (WfH). We show this by adding WfH to a large set of explanatory variables. Moreover, we implement an instrumental variables estimation based on industry-specific levels of WfH-capacity. The transmission channels seem to work via increased available time and time flexibility. Moreover, we show that WfH makes the stock market accessible to a broader population, including lower income groups, which may contribute to lower income inequality in the future.

Lorenz Meister

Ph.D. Student in the German Socio-Economic Panel study Research Infrastructure

Lukas Menkhoff

Research Associate in the German Socio-Economic Panel study Research Infrastructure

Carsten Schröder

Division Head Applied Panel Analysis in the German Socio-Economic Panel study Research Infrastructure



JEL-Classification: D31;G11;G51
Keywords: Stock market participation, work from home, inequality

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