Decomposing household income differences between farmers and non‐farmers: Empirical evidence from Norway

Author:

Mittenzwei Klaus1ORCID,Berglann Helge2,Hoveid Øyvind2,Matthews Alan3,Storm Hugo4

Affiliation:

1. Ruralis—Institute of Rural and Regional Research Universitetssenteret Dragvoll Trondheim Norway

2. Norwegian Institute of Bioeconomy Research (NIBIO) Ås Norway

3. Department of Economics Trinity College Dublin Ireland

4. Department of Food and Resource Economics University of Bonn Bonn Germany

Abstract

AbstractIncome comparisons between farm and non‐farm households play a crucial role in many aspects of farm policy. Using household income data from tax returns of all Norwegian taxpayers in the period 2006–2015 we study these income differences. We find that the unconditional mean income is higher for farm households, but with important differences depending on the comparison group considered. We also find that the income difference is reduced when we control for differences in the personal characteristics of the different non‐farm comparison sub‐groups. This finding implies that income comparison using unconditional means, as frequently done in agricultural policy making, is potentially misleading. We also show that the income effect of personal characteristics is not the same for different comparison sub‐groups, as has been assumed in previous studies of income disparities. Differences in personal characteristics, and the income effect of those characteristics, therefore need to be accounted for if income comparisons between farmers and non‐farmers are to inform farm support policies.

Funder

Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft

Norges Forskningsråd

Publisher

Wiley

Reference15 articles.

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4. Changing economic perspectives on the farm problem;Gardner B. L.;Journal of Economic Literature,1992

5. Farm incomes, wealth and agricultural policy: filling the CAP's core information gap

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