Measuring Welfare and Inequality with Incomplete Price Information

Author:

Atkin David1,Faber Benjamin2,Fally Thibault2,Gonzalez-Navarro Marco3

Affiliation:

1. Masschusetts Institute of Technology and National Bureau of Economic Research , United States

2. University of California , Berkeley and National Bureau of Economic Research , United States

3. University of California , Berkeley , United States

Abstract

Abstract We propose and implement a new approach that allows us to estimate income-specific changes in household welfare in contexts where well-measured prices are not available for important subsets of consumption. Using rich but widely available expenditure survey microdata, we show that we can recover income-specific equivalent and compensating variations from horizontal shifts in what we call “relative Engel curves”—as long as preferences fall within the broad quasi-separable class (Gorman 1970, 1976). Our approach is flexible enough to allow for nonparametric estimation at each point of the income distribution. We apply the methodology to estimate inflation and welfare changes in rural India between 1987 and 2000. Our estimates reveal that lower rates of inflation for the rich erased the real income convergence found in the existing literature that uses the subset of consumption with well-measured prices to calculate inflation.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Economics and Econometrics

Reference47 articles.

1. International Income Inequality: Measuring PPP Bias by Estimating Engel Curves for Food;Almås;American Economic Review,2012

2. Lost in Translation: What Do Engel Curves Tell Us about the Cost of Living?;Almås,2018

3. Rags and Riches: Relative Prices, Non-Homothetic Preferences, and Inequality in India;Almås;World Development,2017

4. Cost of Living Inequality during the Great Recession;Argente;Journal of the European Economic Association,2021

5. “Measuring the Cost of Living in Mexico and the United States,”;Argente;American Economic Journal: Macroeconomics,2023

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