Review of Income and Wealth

Papers
(The TQCC of Review of Income and Wealth is 4. The table below lists those papers that are above that threshold based on CrossRef citation counts [max. 250 papers]. The publications cover those that have been published in the past four years, i.e., from 2021-09-01 to 2025-09-01.)
ArticleCitations
Enterprise information and communications technology software pricing and developer productivity measurement92
Private Wealth Over the Life Cycle: A Meeting Between Microsimulation and Structural Approaches37
A measurement scale for material deprivation: A model‐based approach29
Factor Substitution Possibilities, Labor Share Dynamics, and Inequality in an Age of Intangibles20
Issue Information18
Parental Expenditures of Time and Money on Children in the U.S.17
Inequality Beyond GDP: A Long View17
Retrospective Computations of Price Index Numbers: Theory and Application16
Has Eastern Europe Always Lagged Behind the West? Historical Evidence from Pre‐187014
13
Small Area Estimation of Poverty Under Structural Change12
Understanding International Price and Consumption Disparities12
Ethical Accounting for Mineral Endowments: A Framework for Sustainable Public Finances11
Issue Information11
Issue Information10
9
Issue Information8
The 0.0003 Percent: Short‐Run Dynamics of Extreme Wealth in America8
Measuring Households' Financial Fragilities: An analysis at the intersection of income, financial wealth, and debt8
Editors' Introduction8
Capital and Labor Income Pareto Exponents Across Time and Space7
Issue Information7
Wealth in Latin America: Evidence from Chile, Colombia, Mexico and Uruguay7
Risky Asset Holdings During Covid‐19 and their Distributional Impact: Evidence from Germany7
Household Debt and Risk Tolerance: Evidence From China7
Inequality and Market Concentration: New Evidence from Australia7
Do Productivity Laggards Ever Catch Up With Leaders?†7
Measuring Pandemic and Lockdown Impacts on Wellbeing7
Wealth, Inheritance, and Concentration: Italy and Its Regions From the Unification to the Great War6
Lifting You up or Dragging You Down? The Role of Financial Inclusion in Poverty Transitions Among Italian Households6
Anchoring Measurement of the Middle‐Income Class to Subjective Evaluation6
Land Allocation Policy and Income Inequality: Evidence From Vietnam6
Return Versus onward Migration: Go Back or Move On?6
How Wealthy are the Rich?6
6
Inequality in Pre‐Industrial Europe (1260–1850): New Evidence From the Labor Share6
6
Economies of Scale for Household Wealth: An Analysis of Equivalence Scales6
The Productivity Slowdown in Advanced Economies: Common Shocks or Common Trends?6
Pandemic Policy and Life Satisfaction in Europe6
5
Care Data Infrastructure: A U.S. Case Study5
The Last Thing on Your Mind: Recall Bias in EU Income Measurement5
Public Healthcare Spending, Business Dynamism, and Wage Inequality: Evidence from Developed and Developing Economies5
Revising the Global Multidimensional Poverty Index: Empirical Insights and Robustness5
Issue Information5
Dale Weldeau Jorgenson (1933–2022): in Memoriam*,15
5
Do the Wealthy Underreport Their Income? Using General Election Filings to Study the Income–Wealth Relationship in India5
Intersectional Inequality in Education in Africa, Asia, and the Americas5
Shlomo Yitzhaki (1944–2023): In Memoriam5
Earnings Losses and the Role of the Welfare State During the COVID‐19 Pandemic: Evidence from Sweden5
Accounting for Non‐Marketed capital5
Economic Recovery but Stagnating Mental Health During a Global Pandemic? Evidence from Ghana and South Africa5
Evaluating the Distributive Incidence of Growth Using Cross‐sections and Panels4
Issue Information4
Income sources, intrahousehold allocation and individual poverty4
The Gender Wealth Gap in Europe: Application of Machine Learning to Predict Individual‐level Wealth4
Group‐specific redistribution, inequality, and subjective well‐being in China4
Does Worker Well‐Being Adapt to a Pandemic? An Event Study Based on High‐Frequency Panel Data4
Issue Information4
Assessing Income Convergence with a Long‐run Forecasting Approach: Some New Results4
From the Main Determinants of Self‐Declared Minimum Income to the Measure of Sub‐National Purchasing Power Parity4
A Welfare Test for Sharing Health Data4
An Index Approach to Measuring Product Differentiation: A Hedonic Analysis of Airfares4
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