The Netherlands: policy-enhanced inequalities tempered by household formation

Authors
Publication date 2014
Host editors
  • B. Nolan
  • W. Salverda
  • D. Checchi
  • I. Marx
  • A. McKnight
  • I.G. Tóth
  • H. van de Werfhorst
Book title Changing inequalities and societal impacts in rich countries: thirty countries' experiences
ISBN
  • 9780199687428
Pages (from-to) 459-487
Publisher Oxford: Oxford University Press
Organisations
  • Faculty of Social and Behavioural Sciences (FMG) - Amsterdam Institute for Social Science Research (AISSR)
Abstract
Dutch inequality in market incomes has grown significantly and structurally, especially at the top. Income redistribution remained important but did not fully compensate, and policy actually enhanced inequality in net equivalized incomes. Lower minimum wages and benefits induced a sharp rise in the 1980s, and the ensuing restructuring of social security led to a slow further increase. Relative poverty trends follow the same pattern. The consequences for low incomes were exacerbated by a tax reform in 1990, but a more fundamental tax reform in 2001 neutralized part of this. Shifts in household composition offer considerable compensation for the rise in inequality. However, strong gradients by educational attainment have proliferated across many of the fields where we examined the social and political/cultural impacts of growing inequality. Only occasionally, and often hampered by a lack of long-run data, impacts are found that seem linked to inequality growth over time.
Document type Chapter
Language English
Published at https://doi.org/10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199687428.003.0020
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