Publication: Comparing Income and Wealth Inequality in Pre-Industrial economies. Lessons from Spain in the 18th century
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Nicolini, Esteban
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Abstract
Research on the history of inequality in pre-industrial economies has focused
mainly on either wealth or income inequality. The most common problem with wealth
inequality is the lack information about the bottom of the distribution while the main
problem with income inequality is the lack of data to characterize the top of the
distribution. Given that in general these approaches are based in different kinds of
sources and methodologies, the results are not easy to compare and the links between
the two distributions are difficult to establish. In this paper we use a unique data set
for different regions of Spain circa 1750 and present results (the first for any pre-20th
century economy) of inequality of both income and wealth for the same sample of
households. Information of wealth comes from probate inventories while information
of income comes from the Ensenada Cadastre. The main results of the paper are that
poor households are not completely absent from our data set of inventories, that the
position of a household in the distribution of income is closely associated to its
position in the distribution of wealth and that an increase of a household¿s wealth is
associated to a less-than-proportional increase in the household¿s income.






