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Measurement and Source Identification of Opportunity Inequality of Wealth in China: Path Common Prosperity |
SUN Sanbai, ZHANG Qingping, LI Ran
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School of Applied Economics, Renmin University of China; School of Economics, Peking University; Institute for Global Health and Development/National School of DeveLopment, Peking University |
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Abstract Common prosperity refers to a state where all people achieve a decent standard of living through hard work and mutual assistance, signifying the elimination of extreme wealth inequality and poverty. Achieving common prosperity for all citizens is the essential requirement for promoting Chinese path to modernization. To achieve common prosperity, it is necessary to identify the sources of wealth inequality, so as to find an effective way to promote common prosperity. According to Roemer's “circumstance-effort” framework, personal wealth is determined by both environmental and effort-related factors. Inequality arising from environmental factors, or inequality of opportunity, should be eradicated through public policy, whereas inequality solely due to effort is considered reasonable and can be allowed within certain limits. Therefore, in promoting common prosperity, it is essential to permit a reasonable degree of wealth inequality while focusing on reducing inequality of opportunity in wealth, which is caused by environmental factors. Based on the 2017 China Household Financial Survey (CHFS) data, this study employs the Mean Logarithmic Deviation to measure inequality levels and uses ex-ante parameter method and the conditional inference tree method (machine learning) to construct “counterfactual wealth.” We identify and calculate the proportion of inequality of opportunity within wealth inequality and decompose the sources and indirect channels of inequality of opportunity in wealth using the Shapley value method. The findings are as follows: ① In 2017, the inequality of opportunity in wealth far exceeds that in income significantly, with inequality of opportunity accounting for approximately 57% to 72% of the factors contributing to wealth inequality and about 32% for income inequality. ② The inequality of opportunity in wealth exhibits marked variations across birth cohorts, with those born in the 1950s and 1970s experiencing notably higher levels of inequality of opportunity in wealth than other cohorts. ③ Among the sources of inequality of opportunity, factors related to housing and finance contribute the most. Respondents' initial household registration type, parental education level, provincial economic development during their adolescence, the region in adolescence, housing price, and financial access rank among the foremost contributors, collectively accounting for over 85% of inequality of opportunity in wealth. ④ The impact of environmental factors—comprising individual characteristics, family backgrounds, regional elements, and macroeconomic elements—varies across birth cohorts. The contribution rate of family background to inequality of opportunity in wealth among the “1950s” to “1980s-1990s” cohorts progressively increases with each birth generation, while the contribution rate of regional factors generally shows a declining trend. ⑤ In terms of indirect channels, the education channel contributes over 10% to inequality of opportunity in wealth across all birth cohorts, the employment channel has the highest contribution to inequality of opportunity in wealth for those born in the 1950s, and the investment channel has a limited impact across all cohorts. In light of our conclusions, it is evident that environmental factors significantly influence wealth accumulation. Therefore, addressing inequality of opportunity is a critical step in promoting common prosperity. The implementation of public policies aimed at optimizing housing regulation, narrowing regional gap, improving the regional financial system, and enhancing intergenerational mobility to progressively diminish the inequality of opportunity in wealth is a vital pathway to achieve common prosperity. Our paper makes the following three contributions. First, it extends the study of inequality of opportunity from income disparity to wealth disparity. Most of the literature focuses on inequality of opportunity in income, analyzing the causes of income inequality. Considering the significant differences between wealth and income, this paper identifies and calculates the proportion of inequality of opportunity within wealth inequality, thus enriching and expanding the literature on the inequality of opportunity in China. Second, this paper identifies the sources and indirect channels of inequality of opportunity in wealth using the Shapley value method. Given the significant differences between income and wealth, this paper introduces factors such as economic support from parents for housing purchases, property inheritance, and housing-related environmental factors (including housing demolition, housing price growth rates, and housing system reforms) to analyze the important roles of housing wealth and inherited wealth in inequality of opportunity in wealth. Furthermore, it incorporates factors such as financial investment and property acquisition to examine the specific indirect channels through which inequality of opportunity in wealth is manifests. Third, considering the evident differences in the impact of environmental factors on each birth cohort, and the different life stages of these cohorts, this paper categorizes individuals according to their birthyear and explores the intergenerational trends of inequality of opportunity in wealth.
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Received: 10 January 2022
Published: 16 July 2024
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