Global Financial Shocks and American Elites: Income and Wealth of the One Percent in the United States, 1989 to 2022.

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2025-01

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Abstract

Extreme levels of inequality have drawn increasing attention to those at the top of the income and wealth distributions, and the United States is home to some of the world's most affluent and influential households. A robust literature on economic elites in the United States documented details about their incomes and wealth prior to 2019, but it is unclear how recent economic shocks affected their financial resources and the distribution of income and wealth among U.S. households more broadly. We contribute to the literatures on elite households and global political economies by exploring the association between the global economic shock that accompanied the coronavirus 2019 disease (COVID-19) pandemic and U.S. income and wealth. We use data from the 1989-2022 Survey of Consumer Finances (SCF) to provide details regarding changing inequality and the incomes and wealth of the top one percent of households. We explore changes in income sources (e.g., wage, business, capital) and wealth components (e.g., real estate, financial assets) to identify reasons for changing resource composition. We study how the demographics-age and education-of the one percent have changed, and we also explore whether the double-rich-those with both top incomes and top wealth-have changed. Our results are among the first to document the current concentration of economic resources in the United States and underscore the need to incorporate global processes in understanding inequalities in major economies.

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Elites, one percent, income, wealth, inequality, global financial shocks

Citation

Published Version (Please cite this version)

10.1177/00027642251314628

Publication Info

Keister, Lisa A, and Hang Young Lee (2025). Global Financial Shocks and American Elites: Income and Wealth of the One Percent in the United States, 1989 to 2022. The American behavioral scientist. 10.1177/00027642251314628 Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/33702.

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Scholars@Duke

Keister

Lisa A. Keister

Professor of Sociology

Lisa A. Keister is professor of sociology and public policy at Duke University and an affiliate of the Duke Network Analysis Center and the Duke Population Research Initiative. Her current research focuses on organization strategy, elite households, the processes that explain extremes in wealth and income inequality, and on group differences in the intergenerational transfer of assets. She has been focusing on the causes and consequences of net worth poverty recently with colleagues from the Sanford school and is currently completing two books: one on America’s wealthiest families, the one percent, and one on net worth poverty.


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