Share the page

Inequality measurements: the impact of a correction for missing top incomes in a South African household survey

Published on

AFD Policy Dialogues - EU-AFD Research Facility on Inequalities

Often the richest households are poorly captured in household surveys1, leading to a likely underestimate of inequality in analyses such as CEQ Assessments2 that conduct fiscal incidence using household surveys. The South Africa 2014/15 Living Conditions Survey (LCS) is no different. The top 1 percent of taxpayers earn R223 000 on average, versus an average of R1.9 million in taxable income annually in the administrative data3. A new CEQ Assessment for South Africa4 takes advantage of high-quality administrative data on the income distribution to adjust the 2014/15 LCS survey distribution permitting an examination of the impact on inequality, the progressivity of different instruments, and their contributions to inequality.
 

Useful Information

Authors
Maya GOLDMAN, Jon JELLEMA, Ingrid WOOLARD
Coordinators
Edition
45
Page number
2
ISSN
in process
Collection
Policy Dialogues