Vortrag
Wealth Distribution within Couples and Financial Decision Making

Eva M. Sierminska, Markus M. Grabka, Jan Marcus


IARIW 2012 General Conference : 32nd General Conference
Boston, USA, 05.08.2012 - 11.08.2012


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Abstract:
While most previous studies on wealth inequality focus on the inequality between households, this paper examines the distribution of wealth within couples. For this purpose, we make use of unique individual level micro data from the German Socio-Economic Panel (SOEP). Men in couples possess on average 33,000 Euro more net worth than women. We look at five different sets of factors (demographics, income, labor market, inheritances, financial decision making in the partnership) that might explain this wealth gap. We find that all factors contribute to the explanation of the wealth gap within partnerships, with inheritances and income being particularly relevant. Furthermore, we find that specific characteristics (e.g. self-employment, no migration background, inheritances, high income) that decrease the wealth gap for women increase it for men. For men the respective coefficients are even stronger in absolute terms. When examining intra-partnership financial decision making, wefind the gap to be significantly smaller when the female manages the money and larger if the male partner has the last word in financial decisions.

Abstract

While most previous studies on wealth inequality focus on the inequality between households, this paper examines the distribution of wealth within couples. For this purpose, we make use of unique individual level micro data from the German Socio-Economic Panel (SOEP). Men in couples possess on average 33,000 Euro more net worth than women. We look at five different sets of factors (demographics, income, labor market, inheritances, financial decision making in the partnership) that might explain this wealth gap. We find that all factors contribute to the explanation of the wealth gap within partnerships, with inheritances and income being particularly relevant. Furthermore, we find that specific characteristics (e.g. self-employment, no migration background, inheritances, high income) that decrease the wealth gap for women increase it for men. For men the respective coefficients are even stronger in absolute terms. When examining intra-partnership financial decision making, wefind the gap to be significantly smaller when the female manages the money and larger if the male partner has the last word in financial decisions.

Jan Marcus

Juniorprofessor

Markus M. Grabka

Wissenschaftlicher Mitarbeiter in der Infrastruktureinrichtung Sozio-oekonomisches Panel



JEL-Classification: D13;D31;D69;I31
Keywords: Wealth gap, Wealth inequality, Intra-household allocation,Gender, Financial decision making, SOEP
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