April 14, 2023
Journal Article

Non-parametric projections of national income distribution consistent with the Shared Socioeconomic Pathways

Abstract

Understanding and projecting income distributions within countries and regions is important to understanding consumption trends and the consequences of climate impacts and responses. Several global, country-level projections of income distribution are available but most project only the Gini coefficient (a summary statistic of the distribution) or utilize the Gini along with the assumption of a lognormal distribution. We test the lognormal assumption and find that it typically underestimates income in the highest deciles and over-estimates it in others. We find that a model based on two principal components of national time series data for income distribution provides a better fit to the data for all deciles, especially for the highest and lowest. We also construct a projection model in which the first principal component is driven by the Gini co-efficient and the second captures deviations from this relationship. We use the model to project income distribution by decile for all countries for the five Shared Socioeconomic Pathways. We find that inequality is consistently higher than projections based on the Gini and the lognormal functional form, with some countries reaching ratios of the highest to lowest income deciles that are almost three times their value using the lognormal assumption.

Published: April 14, 2023

Citation

Narayan K., B. O'Neill, S.T. Waldhoff, and C. Tebaldi. 2023. Non-parametric projections of national income distribution consistent with the Shared Socioeconomic Pathways. Environmental Research Letters 18, no. 4:Art. No. 044013. PNNL-SA-176610. doi:10.1088/1748-9326/acbdb0

Research topics