| Property | Value | 
|---|
      
        | ?:abstract | 
            
              Earlier  work  has  established  that  the  US  has  exceptionally  high  inequality  of  disposable household income (i.e., income after accounting for taxes and transfers).  There is a debate whether it is due to an unusually high inequality of market (pre‐tax‐pre‐transfer) income or to weak redistribution. In this paper, we look more deeply at  market income inequality, focusing on its main component – labor income – across a  group  of  24  OECD  countries.  We disaggregate  the  working‐age  population  into  household types, defined by the number and gender of the household’s earners and  the partnership and parenting status of its members. We conclude that within‐group inequality of labor incomes in the US is, in almost all groups, high by OECD standards.  The  roots  of  US  inequality exceptionalism  are  not  to  be  found  in 
an  unusual  demographic  composition,  nor  in  unusually  high  or  low mean  incomes  of  some  demographic groups, but in pervasive high inequality within each of these groups.  
                 (xsd:string)
              
             | 
      
        | ?:author |  | 
      
        | ?:comment |  | 
      
        | ?:dataSource | 
            
              EU-SILC-Bibliography
                 (xsd:string)
              
             | 
      
        | ?:dateModified |  | 
      
        | ?:datePublished |  | 
      
        | ?:editor |  | 
      
        | ?:fromPage |  | 
      
        | is
          ?:hasPart
          of |  | 
      
        | ?:inLanguage |  | 
      
        | ?:name | 
            
              In Search of the Roots of American Inequality Exceptionalism: An Analysis Based on Luxembourg Income Study (LIS) Data
                 (xsd:string)
              
             | 
      
        | ?:publicationType | 
            
              incollection
                 (xsd:string)
              
             | 
      
        | ?:publisher |  | 
      
        | ?:reference |  | 
      
        | ?:sourceCollection | 
            
              Measuring Distribution and Mobility of Income and Wealth
                 (xsd:string)
              
             | 
      
        | ?:sourceInfo | 
            
              Bibsonomy
                 (xsd:string)
              
            
              In Measuring Distribution and Mobility of Income and Wealth, edited by Chetty, Raj and Friedman, John N. and Gornick, Janet C. and Johnson, Barry and Kennickell, Arthur, 19-44, University of Chicago Press, 2022
                 (xsd:string)
              
             | 
      
        | ?:studyGroup | 
            
              European Union Statistics on Income and Living Conditions (EU-SILC)
                 (xsd:string)
              
             | 
      
        | ?:tags | 
            
              2022
                 (xsd:string)
              
            
              FDZ_GML
                 (xsd:string)
              
            
              SILC
                 (xsd:string)
              
            
              SILC_input2022
                 (xsd:string)
              
            
              SILC_pro
                 (xsd:string)
              
            
              english
                 (xsd:string)
              
            
              incollection
                 (xsd:string)
              
            
              jak
                 (xsd:string)
              
            
              transfer22
                 (xsd:string)
              
             | 
      
        | ?:toPage |  | 
      
        | rdf:type |  | 
      
        | ?:url |  |