UK Income Inequality and Taxation, 2000--2023: A $κ$-generalised Distribution Analysis
TLDR
This paper analyzes UK income inequality (2000-2023), finding income redistribution with the top 1% gaining and the tax base driven by non-top earners.
Key contributions
- Analyzes UK income distribution (2000-2023) using a prefactor-adjusted $κ$-generalised specification.
- Identifies income redistribution: bottom 40% gained, middle-upper lost, top 1% increased pre-tax share.
- Finds revenue-equivalent tax increases on high earners must be over four times larger than on lower earners.
- Concludes the UK tax base is primarily driven by the large number of taxpayers outside the very top.
Why it matters
This paper offers a detailed, updated analysis of UK income inequality and tax dynamics over two decades. It reveals a complex redistribution pattern and provides crucial insights into the effectiveness of tax reforms, showing the broader tax base's importance.
Original Abstract
We analyse the UK income distribution from 2000 to 2023 using HMRC annual percentile data for both pre-tax and post-tax income. We fit a prefactor-adjusted $κ$-generalised specification to the data by weighted non-linear least squares and use inverse transform sampling to generate simulated income populations. The results suggest a redistribution of income shares over the period: the bottom 40\% appears to have increased its share, the middle-upper part of the distribution (50th--90th percentiles) lost share, the top 10\% remained broadly stable, and the top 1\% increased its share of pre-tax income. Because the modified specification is defined only above a positive threshold, conclusions concerning the lower tail should be interpreted with some caution. Using simulated 2023 pre-tax incomes to examine tax reform scenarios, we find that revenue-equivalent tax increases on high-income earners must be more than four times as large as comparable increases on lower-income earners. This suggests that, despite increased concentration at the top, the UK tax base remains driven primarily by the large number of taxpayers outside the very top of the distribution.
📬 Weekly AI Paper Digest
Get the top 10 AI/ML arXiv papers from the week — summarized, scored, and delivered to your inbox every Monday.