Affiliation:
1. LMU Munich, CESifo (email: )
2. Department of Economics, Stockholm School of Economics (email: )
3. University of Minnesota, Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis, and NBER (email: )
4. Southern Methodist University (email: )
Abstract
We provide new evidence on business cycle fluctuations in skewed labor income risk in the United States, Germany, Sweden, and France. We document four results. First, in all countries, the skewness of individual income growth is strongly procyclical, whereas its variance is flat and acyclical. Second, this result also holds for continuously employed, full-time workers, indicating that the hours margin is not the main driver; additional analyses of hours and wages confirm that both margins are important. Third, within-household smoothing does not seem effective at mitigating skewness fluctuations. Fourth, tax-and-transfer policies blunt some of the largest declines in incomes, reducing procyclical fluctuations in skewness. (JEL E23, E24, E32, H24, I38, J22, J31)
Publisher
American Economic Association
Subject
General Economics, Econometrics and Finance
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