Abstract
Increasing Inequality: The Role of American Household Indebtedness Between 1989 and 2004
[PDF] Authors: Allison Freeman, Janneke Ratcliffe
April 2009
This paper provides an analysis of American indebtedness between 1989 and 2004 in order to address the following question: have growing levels of indebtedness and differential uses of debt exacerbated economic inequality in America since the 1980s? The paper considers debt from an instrument perspective using data from the Survey of Consumer Finances; all analyses are disaggregated by income group, race/ethnicity, tenure, and educational attainment.
The authors consider three things: the differing ability of Americans to use debt productively or non-productively; whether or not the analyses provide evidence of increasing inequality in terms of Americans' financial security; and the effect of Americans' indebtedness by the mid-2000s on their ability to weather the country's current financial maelstrom. The authors conclude that the differing ability of Americans to use debt productively served to exacerbate economic inequality over time. Inequality in terms of financial insecurity either remained strong or increased over the time frame, with those who have historically had less wealth and lower incomes being hardest hit.
Abbreviations: AFDC - Aid to Families with Dependent Children; PEU - primary economic unit; SCF - Survey of Consumer Finances; TANF - Temporary Assistance for Needy Families.
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