Disparities in Wealth Accumulation and Loss from the Great Recession and Beyond

S-Tier
Journal: American Economic Review
Year: 2014
Volume: 104
Issue: 5
Pages: 240-44

Score contribution per author:

2.011 = (α=2.01 / 4 authors) × 4.0x S-tier

α: calibrated so average coauthorship-adjusted count equals average raw count

Abstract

Using over two decades of Survey of Consumer Finances data and a pseudo-panel technique, we measure the impact of the Great Recession on US family wealth relative to the counterfactual of what wealth would have been given wealth accumulation trajectories. Our synthetic cohort-level models find that the Great Recession reduced average family wealth by 28.5 percent–nearly double the magnitude of previous pre-post mean descriptive estimates and double the magnitude of any previous recession since the 1980s. The housing market was only part of the story; all major wealth components fell as a result of the Great Recession.

Technical Details

RePEc Handle
repec:aea:aecrev:v:104:y:2014:i:5:p:240-44
Journal Field
General
Author Count
4
Added to Database
2026-01-26