AUTHORS
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Sagiri Kitao
Professor, GRIPS
Michio Suzuki
Associate Professor, Graduate School of Economics and Management, Tohoku University
Tomoaki Yamada
Professor, Graduate School of commerce, Meiji University
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ABSTRACT
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This paper examines life-cycle earnings risk and income inequality in Japan using
municipal administrative tax records covering 2011–2021. We estimate an agedependent
quantile model that decomposes idiosyncratic earnings into persistent
and transitory components, allowing persistence to vary nonlinearly with individuals’
positions in the earnings distribution and the size of shocks. We find that persistence
is high for shocks consistent with an individual’s earnings history but falls
sharply for “reversal” shocks, which may represent career changes. Cross-sectional
analysis shows that households pool income effectively: equivalized household income
displays lower dispersion and a J-shaped life-cycle inequality profile compared
to a monotonically rising profile for individual earnings. However, impulse response
analysis reveals that when individuals or households at a given percentile of the
persistent component distribution receive either a high or low percentile draw from
the innovation distribution, the resulting earnings changes are larger for equivalized
household earnings than for the earnings of the household head alone. This indicates
that household and individual earnings distributions have distinct dynamic
properties, with household-level responses potentially reflecting correlated spousal
shocks, joint labor supply decisions, and demographic adjustments.
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