Panel: What Does Administrative Data Add to Our Understanding of Inequality and Social Programs?
(Poverty and Income Policy)

Thursday, November 3, 2016: 10:00 AM-11:30 AM
Dupont (Washington Hilton)

*Names in bold indicate Presenter

Panel Chairs:  Gerald Auten, U.S. Department of the Treasury
Discussants:  Philip Armour, Cornell University; RAND Corporation and Maggie R. Jones, U.S. Census Bureau

What Does Administrative Data Add to Our Understanding of Inequality and Social Programs?

Beyond Top Incomes: The Full Distribution of Household Incomes in Tax Data
Jeff Larrimore1, Jacob Mortenson2 and David Splinter2, (1)Federal Reserve Board, (2)Joint Committee on Taxation



Drawing Down Retirement Wealth: Interactions Between Social Security Wealth and Private Retirement Savings
Philip Armour1, Prodyumna Goutam2 and Angela Hung1, (1)RAND Corporation, (2)Pardee RAND Graduate School



The Sensitivity of U.S. Top Income Shares in Tax Record Data to More Comprehensive Measures of Income
Philip Armour1, Richard Burkhauser1, Gerald Auten2 and Jeff Larrimore3, (1)Cornell University, (2)U.S. Department of the Treasury, (3)Federal Reserve Board




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