The Role of Bequests in Shaping Wealth Inequality: Evidence from Danish Wealth Records

Working Paper: CEPR ID: DP11059

Authors: Simon H. Boserup; Wojciech Kopczuk; Claus T. Kreiner

Abstract: Using Danish administrative data, we estimate the impact of bequests on the level and inequality of wealth. We employ an event study design where we follow the distribution of wealth over time of people who are 45-50 years old, and divided into treatment group and control group depending on whether a parent dies or not. Bequests account for 26 percent of the average post-bequest wealth 1-3 years after parental death and significantly affect wealth throughout the distribution. We find that bequests increase measures of absolute wealth inequality (variance), but reduce relative inequality (top wealth shares). Following the receipts of bequests, variance of the distribution censored at the top/bottom 1% increases by 33 percent, but the top 1% share declines by 6 percentage points from an initial level of 31 percent and the top 10% share declines by 10 percentage points from a base of around 81 percent.

Keywords: bequests; intergenerational mobility; wealth; wealth inequality

JEL Codes: D31; E21; J62


Causal Claims Network Graph

Edges that are evidenced by causal inference methods are in orange, and the rest are in light blue.


Causal Claims

CauseEffect
Parental death (J12)wealth of children aged 45-50 (J13)
Bequests (D64)average wealth of recipients (D31)
Bequests (D64)wealth inequality (D31)
Bequests (D64)relative measures of inequality (D63)
Bequests (D64)absolute measures of inequality (D63)

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