Abstract: Over the period from 1989 to 2001, wealth in real terms grew broadly across U.S.
families. Characterizing distributional changes is much more complex, and much
more dependent on the specific questions asked. For example, there is evidence both
from Forbes data on the 400 wealthiest Americans and from the SCF, which explicitly
excludes families in the Forbes list, that wealth grew relatively strongly at the very
top of the distribution. At the same time, the share of total household wealth held by
the Forbes group rose. However, while the point estimate of the share of total wealth
held by the wealthiest one percent of families as measured by the SCF also rose, the
change is not statistically significant. In 2001, the division of wealth observed in
the SCF attributed about a third each to the wealthiest 1 percent, the next wealthiest
9 percent, and the remaining 90 percent of the population. The paper decomposes wealth
holdings and distributional shifts in a variety of other ways. Particular attention is
given to families with negative net worth, families of older "baby boomer," and African
American families.
Keywords: Wealth distribution, SCF
Full paper (358 KB PDF)
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Last update: July 2, 2003
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