TY - SER AU - Silber,Jacques AU - García-Peñalosa,Cecilia AU - Jäntti,Markus AU - Cowell,Frank AU - Cruces,Guillermo AU - Decancq,Koen AU - Makdissi,Paul AU - Peichl,Andreas AU - Waldenström,Daniel AU - Van Kerm,Phillippe ED - SpringerLink (Online service) TI - The Journal of Economic Inequality SN - 1573-8701 CY - New York PB - Springer US, Imprint: Springer. KW - Political science KW - International economics KW - Public finance KW - Development economics KW - Economic growth KW - Economic Growth KW - Development Economics KW - International Economics KW - Political Science KW - Public Finance N2 - The Journal of Economic Inequality provides a forum for analysis of "economic inequality", broadly defined. Its scope includes:   ·         Theoretical and empirical analysis ·         Monetary measures of 'well-being' such as earnings, income, consumption, and wealth; non-monetary measures such as educational achievement and health and health care; multidimensional measures ·         Inequality and poverty within and between countries, and globally, and their trends over time ·         Inequalities of opportunity ·         Income mobility and poverty persistence ·         The factor distribution of income ·         Differences in 'well-being' between socioeconomic groups, for example between men and women, generations, or ethnic groups ·         The effects of inequality on macroeconomic and other phenomena, and vice versa ·         Related statistical methods and data issues ·         Related policy analysis   Papers need to prioritize the "economic inequality" dimension. For example, papers about trade and inequality, or inequality and growth, should not primarily be about trade or growth (in which case they should target a different journal). The same is true for papers considering the inter-relationships between the income distribution and the labour market, public policy, or demography.   Officially cited as: J Econ Inequal UR - https://doi.org/10.1007/10888.1573-8701 ER -