13. March 2020

Germany: Wealth and inequality rising hand in hand Germany: Wealth and inequality rising hand in hand

Study by the University of Bonn shows historical wealth distribution in Germany

The richest 50 percent of Germans have doubled their wealth since reunification - the poorest 50 percent have gained practically nothing. This is shown by the new study "The Distribution of Wealth in Germany, 1895 to 2018" by the Cluster of Excellence ECONtribute of the Universities of Bonn and Cologne. It is the first comprehensive analysis of the long-run evolution of wealth inequality in Germany. The results are based on historical tax data, studies and surveys as well as rich lists of the last 125 years. The Vice Chancellor and Federal Minister of Finance Olaf Scholz was presented with the study in Berlin.

Group photo:
Group photo: - (from left) Federal Minister of Finance Olaf Scholz, Prof. Thomas Piketty, Prof. Moritz Schularick and the parliamentary State Secretary Sarah Ryglewski, Federal Ministry of Finance © Photo: phototek/Xander Heinl
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The gap between rich and poor is widening more and more: This is the conclusion of a new study by the Cluster of Excellence ECONtribute around a research team led by Bonn economist Prof. Dr. Moritz Schularick. Since reunification, the upper middle class has become significantly richer - while the poor have remained poor. Since 1993, the richest 50 percent of Germans have been able to double their wealth, whereas the wealth of households in the bottom 50% has barely grown at all. As a result, the share of total wealth owned by the bottom 50% has nearly halved since 1993.

This development was driven in particular by the equity and real estate boom, which meant that anyone who owns a house, an apartment or other assets - and previously had enough wealth on the side to afford them - has been able to profit from the rising prices over the past decade. This development has almost by-passed households in the lower wealth strata.

French economist Thomas Piketty, professor at the Paris School of Economics, commented on the study in Berlin: "It shows that wealth inequality remains extremely high, and has increased since the 1990s. The limited access to property and economic participation of the bottom half of the population, together with the large concentration of wealth and economic power at the top, should be a concern for Germany and Europe at large."

The disparity between rich and poor is supported by further figures: While in 1993 the top ten percent of households were on average 50 times richer than the bottom 50 percent, this figure has also doubled by 2018.

"Intelligent and well thought-out public policy requires a solid analysis of the current situation," praised Federal Finance Minister Olaf Scholz on Thursday. "With the first comprehensive long-term study on the development of wealth disparity in Germany, Moritz Schularick and his co-authors are making an important contribution to the economic and socio-political debate. Social cohesion can only succeed if everyone participates in the growth and success of our society."

Current statistics also undervalue the total assets of German households. Especially the many corporations and quasi-corporations are statistically underestimated significantly in Germany. "If you apply international valuation methods, we see that German business assets amounted to around four trillion euros in 2018 and real estate assets to more than nine trillion euros. This means that German business assets have been undervalued by up to two trillion euros," says study author Schularick, explaining the results.

ECONtribute: The only Cluster of Excellence in economics

The study was conducted within ECONtribute. It is the only Cluster of Excellence in economics that is funded by the German Research Foundation (DFG) and a joint initiative of the universities of Bonn and Cologne. The Cluster’s research focuses on markets at the interface between business, politics and society. The Cluster aims to advance a new paradigm for the analysis of market failure in light of fundamental societal, technological and economic challenges, such as increasing inequality and political polarization or global financial crises.

Publication: https://selten.institute/2020/03/12/econtribute_verteilung_der_vermoegen/


Press contact:

Katrin Tholen
ECONtribute
Tel. +49 228 737808
E-mail: katrin.tholen@uni-bonn.de

Contact the author of the study:

Prof. Dr. Moritz Schularick
ECONtribute
Tel. +49 228 737976
E-mail: moritz.schularick@uni-bonn.de

French economist Thomas Piketty,
French economist Thomas Piketty, - professor at the Paris School of Economics, commented on the study in Berlin. © Photo: phototek/Xander Heinl
Prof. Dr. Moritz Schularick
Prof. Dr. Moritz Schularick - from the ECONtribute Cluster of Excellence of the Universities of Bonn and Cologne at the presentation of the study in Berlin. © Photo: phototek/Xander Heinl
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