Capitalist Income and Hierarchical Power: A Gradient Hypothesis

dc.contributor.authorFix, Blair
dc.date.accessioned2022-11-01T23:11:32Z
dc.date.available2022-11-01T23:11:32Z
dc.date.issued2018
dc.descriptioncapital as power capitalist income functional income distribution hierarchy inequality personal income distribution
dc.description.abstractThis paper offers a new approach to the study of capitalist income. Building on the ‘capital as power’ framework, I propose that capitalists earn their income not from any productive asset, but from the legal right to command a corporate hierarchy. In short, I hypothesize that capitalist income stems from hierarchical power. Based on this thinking, I hypothesize that the capitalist fraction of an individual’s income is a gradient function of hierarchical power (which I define as the number of subordinates under one’s control). Using data from US CEOs, I find evidence that this is true. Furthermore, a hierarchical model of the United States that generalizes this data accurately reproduces many aspects of the US distribution of capitalist income, including the relation between income size and capitalist income fraction. This evidence suggests that the ownership structure of US society is closely linked to the hierarchical structure of firms. This has important implications for the study of income distribution.
dc.identifier.citationCapitalist Income and Hierarchical Power: A Gradient Hypothesis. Fix, Blair. (2018). Working Papers on Capital as Power. No. 2018/06. July. pp. 1-32. (Article - Working Paper; English).
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/10315/39912
dc.titleCapitalist Income and Hierarchical Power: A Gradient Hypothesis
dc.typeWorking Paper

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