Saturday , November 2 2024
Home / le News / Income inequality in Switzerland remains stable after redistribution

Income inequality in Switzerland remains stable after redistribution

Summary:
Income inequality in Switzerland has remained stable according to a report published by Switzerland’s Federal Statistical Office. © Arturo Osorno _ Dreamstime.com A key measure of inequality involves dividing the income share of the top 20% by that of the bottom 20%, a measure known as S80/S20. 1 is complete equality. In 2015, the latest figure, the S80/S20 for Switzerland was 38.2, which means the top 20% had 38.2 times the income of the bottom 20%. This however was before tax and other redistribution. After the redistributive effects of tax and welfare, the ratio dropped from 38.2 to 4.8. As a result, the income share of the bottom 20% rose from 1.2% to 7.8%, and the share of those in the top 20% slid from 44.5% to 37.2%. The share of the 60% in the middle remained roughly the same:

Topics:
Investec considers the following as important: , , , ,

This could be interesting, too:

Investec writes End of lifelong widows’ pensions moves closer to reality

Investec writes Swiss government deficit shrinks further

Investec writes Swiss government wants to invest more in bomb shelters

Investec writes Children most affected by poverty in Switzerland and need more assistance, says report

Income inequality in Switzerland has remained stable according to a report published by Switzerland’s Federal Statistical Office.

© Arturo Osorno _ Dreamstime.com

A key measure of inequality involves dividing the income share of the top 20% by that of the bottom 20%, a measure known as S80/S20. 1 is complete equality.

In 2015, the latest figure, the S80/S20 for Switzerland was 38.2, which means the top 20% had 38.2 times the income of the bottom 20%. This however was before tax and other redistribution.

After the redistributive effects of tax and welfare, the ratio dropped from 38.2 to 4.8. As a result, the income share of the bottom 20% rose from 1.2% to 7.8%, and the share of those in the top 20% slid from 44.5% to 37.2%. The share of the 60% in the middle remained roughly the same: 54.3% before redistribution and 55.0% after redistribution.

While raw income inequality before redistribution, measured using the S80/S20, climbed significantly from 19.0 to 38.3 between 2000 and 2015, after tax and welfare payments, it rose only modestly from 4.3 to 4.8.

More on this:
Swiss Federal Statistical Office data (in French) – Take a 5 minute French test now

Facebook and Twitter.

About Investec
Investec
Investec is a distinctive Specialist Bank and Asset Manager. We provide a diverse range of financial products and services to our niche client base.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *