Score: 0

Disentangling the Distributional Effects of Financial Shocks in the Euro Area

Published: October 13, 2025 | arXiv ID: 2510.11289v1

By: Miloš Ciganović, Elena Scola Gagliardi, Massimiliano Tancioni

Potential Business Impact:

Money shocks make rich richer, poor poorer.

Business Areas:
Impact Investing Financial Services, Lending and Investments

We estimate the dynamic distributional effects of financial shocks in the Euro Area using survey-based microdata on personal incomes. We find that positive financial shocks increase inequality, with heterogeneity across different income groups. Much of the response emerges in the tails of the income distribution. By decomposing individual incomes into financial and labor components, we identify two distinct transmission mechanisms: financial income inequality rises, likely due to differences in asset holdings. In contrast, labor income inequality increases through a skill premium channel. We then consider a nonlinear model framework, distinguishing the sign of the shock, allowing us to document the presence of asymmetric effects. While positive shocks lead to income disparities, adverse shocks have the opposite effect. Notably, middle-income groups are only affected following a negative shock, highlighting differential vulnerabilities across the income distribution.

Country of Origin
🇮🇹 Italy

Page Count
37 pages

Category
Economics:
General Economics