Abstract

Several studies have found mortality differences by income level — higher income individuals tend to live longer — and these differences have been growing over time. This differential mortality could affect measured cohort income inequality because the bottom of the income distribution will become relatively sparse as a cohort ages. This study examines the role played by differential mortality in the course of cohort income inequality as a cohort ages from the late preretirement years to old-age. The results show that differential mortality explains little of cohort income inequality and little of the changes in income inequality. Mortality bias does not appear to effect cohort inequality trends.

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