To benchmark and monitor economic inequality across countries, the OECD relies on two dedicated statistical databases: the OECD Income Distribution Database (IDD), which offers data on levels and trends in income inequality and poverty, and the OECD Wealth Distribution Database (WDD), which collects information on the distribution of household net wealth. OECD IDD is updated on a rolling basis, two to three times a year. OECD WDD is updated every two or three years. If you wish to be informed by email when either database is updated, please contact Inequality.Contact@oecd.org.
OECD Income Distribution Database (IDD)19 December 2023: New data are available for Chile and Costa Rica (income year 2022); the United States (income year 2022, provisional); the United Kingdom (income year 2021/22); Austria, Belgium, Bulgaria, Canada, Croatia, the Czech Republic, Estonia, France, Greece, Hungary, Ireland, Italy, Korea, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Poland, Portugal, Romania, the Slovak Republic, Slovenia, Spain (income year 2021); Chile, France, Germany, the Slovak Republic, Switzerland and Türkiye (income year 2020). Data have been revised for Latvia (income year 2021). See data:
See also:
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OECD Wealth Distribution Database (WDD)Tuesday 6 July 2021: - New Policy brief: Inequalities in Household Wealth and Financial Insecurity of Households + statistical annex - Policy Webinar on Inequalities in Household Wealth and Financial Insecurity of Households, organised by the OECD and EC DG Employment: Agenda and Replay - Update of the OECD WDD. See current data:
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METHODs and concepts (IDD)
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OTHER INTERNATIONAL DATABASES RELATED TO INCOME DISTRIBUTION
Quality reviews (IDD)
This quality review (December 2012) is in three main parts: |
See also external Review of the OECD Income Distribution Database - The Journal of Economic Inequality - December 2015, Volume 13, Issue 4, pp 579–602
THE new 2020 edition of the OECD "COMPARE YOUR INCOME" WEB TOOL
How much do you earn compared with others in your country? Do you feel rich, poor, or just average? In only a few clicks, you can see where you fit in your country's income distribution. This new 2020 edition explores how your perceptions of income inequality impact your willingness to support redistribution initiatives, and allows you to have a say in what areas are most important to you for public spending.
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