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Add labor income volatility analysis to IFP advanced lecture (#749)
Added a new exercise (Exercise 2) that analyzes how wealth inequality varies
with labor income volatility (a_y), complementing the existing analysis of
return volatility (a_r).
Key findings:
- Varying return volatility (a_r: 0.10 to 0.16) increases Gini from 0.19 to 0.79
- Varying labor income volatility (a_y: 0.125 to 0.20) only increases Gini from 0.18 to 0.19
- Demonstrates that capital income risk is a much more powerful driver of wealth inequality than labor income risk
Also cleaned up the wealth distribution plotting code and removed diagnostic output.
🤖 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.com/claude-code)
Co-authored-by: Claude <noreply@anthropic.com>
The histogram shows the wealth distribution with the y-axis on a log scale, allowing us to see both the mass of households at low wealth levels and the long right tail of the distribution.
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The histogram shows the distribution of log wealth.
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Bearing in mind that we are looking at log values, the histogram suggests
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a long right tail of the distribution.
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Below we examine this in more detail.
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## Wealth Inequality
@@ -751,7 +744,7 @@ We loop over different values of `a_r`, solve the model for each, simulate the w
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```{code-cell} ipython3
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# Range of a_r values to explore
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a_r_vals = np.linspace(0.10, 0.16, 7)
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a_r_vals = np.linspace(0.10, 0.16, 5)
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gini_vals = []
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print("Computing Gini coefficients for different return volatilities...\n")
The plot shows that wealth inequality increases with labor income volatility, but the effect is much weaker than the effect of return volatility.
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Comparing the two exercises:
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- When return volatility (`a_r`) varies from 0.10 to 0.16, the Gini coefficient rises dramatically from around 0.20 to 0.79
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- When labor income volatility (`a_y`) varies from 0.125 to 0.20, a similar amount in percentage terms, the Gini coefficient increases but by a much smaller amount
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This suggests that capital income risk is a more important driver of wealth inequality than labor income risk.
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The intuition is that wealth accumulation compounds over time: households who
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experience favorable returns on their assets can reinvest those returns, leading
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to exponential growth.
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In contrast, labor income shocks, while they affect current consumption and
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savings, do not have the same compounding effect on wealth accumulation.
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