Inheritance, gifts and the accumulation of wealth for low-income households

Author:

Morelli Salvatore1,Nolan Brian2ORCID,Palomino Juan C2ORCID,Van Kerm Philippe3

Affiliation:

1. Law Department, University of Roma Tre, Rome, Italy; and Stone Center on Socio-Economic Inequality at the Graduate Center CUNY

2. INET and Department of Social Policy and Intervention, University of Oxford, Oxford, United Kingdom

3. Department of Social Sciences, University of Luxembourg and Luxembourg Institute of Socio-Economic Research, Luxembourg

Abstract

Many low-income households in rich countries have very little wealth, but the role of intergenerational wealth transmission in underpinning this deficit is not known. This article seeks to fill that gap by investigating patterns of past wealth transfer receipt for low-income versus other households in seven rich countries and assessing the contribution that these transfers, or their absence, make to current wealth levels. We find that households on low incomes are relatively disadvantaged in terms of intergenerational transfers received in the past, both in terms of the likelihood of having received any and the amounts received by those who do benefit from such transfers. The role that this disadvantage plays in the linkage between current low-income and low wealth is assessed and evidence presented that it is significant. Simulation of a universal wealth transfer scheme or ‘capital endowment’ on reaching adulthood for two countries shows that such a policy could lead to a marked decline in the proportion of low-income adults with negative or no wealth. This and alternative or complementary policy responses to these wealth deficits merit the most serious attention.

Funder

Nuffield Foundation

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law,General Social Sciences

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