Brendan Burgess
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A new report out today by the ESRI
ABSTRACT
Over the past 30 years, there have been periods of boom and bust, but average
household incomes have grown strongly in Ireland. The distribution of household
income has been broadly stable over this period, so that there has been substantial
growth for low-, middle- and high-income households. Ireland’s rapid, even growth
in incomes across the distribution is unusual in an international setting. During this
time, inequality has risen in many other countries. As a result, while Ireland was
once towards the high end of the inequality spectrum for an advanced country, it
now occupies a middle-ranking position. Market income inequality is high in
Ireland, but a redistributive tax and transfer system has helped to offset that. Over
the 1987 to 2014 period, discretionary changes in tax and welfare policy led to gains
which were greatest among those with incomes in the lowest 20 per cent of
households. Much of this differential growth in incomes arose from the
implementation of the recommendations of the Commission on Social Welfare
(1986), which raised the payment rates for the schemes with the lowest payment
levels.



My understanding of this table:
Since 1980, in Ireland, the bottom 10% have seen their incomes rise by 3.34% per year, whereas the top 10% have seen their incomes rise by 2.82% per year. In other words, they have all grown at around the same rate.
But in the UK, the top 10% have seen their incomes rise by 2% a year, much faster than the bottom 10% whose income rose only 1.2% a year. Or in common parlance, in the UK, the rich got richer faster than poor, who also got richer.
ABSTRACT
Over the past 30 years, there have been periods of boom and bust, but average
household incomes have grown strongly in Ireland. The distribution of household
income has been broadly stable over this period, so that there has been substantial
growth for low-, middle- and high-income households. Ireland’s rapid, even growth
in incomes across the distribution is unusual in an international setting. During this
time, inequality has risen in many other countries. As a result, while Ireland was
once towards the high end of the inequality spectrum for an advanced country, it
now occupies a middle-ranking position. Market income inequality is high in
Ireland, but a redistributive tax and transfer system has helped to offset that. Over
the 1987 to 2014 period, discretionary changes in tax and welfare policy led to gains
which were greatest among those with incomes in the lowest 20 per cent of
households. Much of this differential growth in incomes arose from the
implementation of the recommendations of the Commission on Social Welfare
(1986), which raised the payment rates for the schemes with the lowest payment
levels.



My understanding of this table:
Since 1980, in Ireland, the bottom 10% have seen their incomes rise by 3.34% per year, whereas the top 10% have seen their incomes rise by 2.82% per year. In other words, they have all grown at around the same rate.
But in the UK, the top 10% have seen their incomes rise by 2% a year, much faster than the bottom 10% whose income rose only 1.2% a year. Or in common parlance, in the UK, the rich got richer faster than poor, who also got richer.
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