A noi! Income inequality and Italian fascism: evidence from labour and top income shares

A century after Mussolini's seizure of power, distributive trends during Interwar Italy are only partially known. This paper presents new evidence on inequality, contributing to the 'classic' debate on Fascism's origins and legacy. Labour shares fell dramatically during the Great...

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Main Author: Gabbuti, G
Format: Working paper
Published: University of Oxford 2020
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author Gabbuti, G
author_facet Gabbuti, G
author_sort Gabbuti, G
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description A century after Mussolini's seizure of power, distributive trends during Interwar Italy are only partially known. This paper presents new evidence on inequality, contributing to the 'classic' debate on Fascism's origins and legacy. Labour shares fell dramatically during the Great War, quickly recovered by 1922, and experienced a steady decline during Fascism, reaching a secular minimum in early 1940s. A newly assembled database of fiscal tabulations shows increasing concentration at the top between 1925 and 1936. These findings testify the fundamentally regressive nature of the Fascist regime, revealing significant discontinuity in Italy's long-run inequality trend.
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spelling oxford-uuid:eeddbb9c-7b39-4347-91ff-fa25fa2c44bf2022-03-27T11:36:02ZA noi! Income inequality and Italian fascism: evidence from labour and top income sharesWorking paperhttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_8042uuid:eeddbb9c-7b39-4347-91ff-fa25fa2c44bfSymplectic ElementsBulk import via SwordUniversity of Oxford2020Gabbuti, GA century after Mussolini's seizure of power, distributive trends during Interwar Italy are only partially known. This paper presents new evidence on inequality, contributing to the 'classic' debate on Fascism's origins and legacy. Labour shares fell dramatically during the Great War, quickly recovered by 1922, and experienced a steady decline during Fascism, reaching a secular minimum in early 1940s. A newly assembled database of fiscal tabulations shows increasing concentration at the top between 1925 and 1936. These findings testify the fundamentally regressive nature of the Fascist regime, revealing significant discontinuity in Italy's long-run inequality trend.
spellingShingle Gabbuti, G
A noi! Income inequality and Italian fascism: evidence from labour and top income shares
title A noi! Income inequality and Italian fascism: evidence from labour and top income shares
title_full A noi! Income inequality and Italian fascism: evidence from labour and top income shares
title_fullStr A noi! Income inequality and Italian fascism: evidence from labour and top income shares
title_full_unstemmed A noi! Income inequality and Italian fascism: evidence from labour and top income shares
title_short A noi! Income inequality and Italian fascism: evidence from labour and top income shares
title_sort noi income inequality and italian fascism evidence from labour and top income shares
work_keys_str_mv AT gabbutig anoiincomeinequalityanditalianfascismevidencefromlabourandtopincomeshares
AT gabbutig noiincomeinequalityanditalianfascismevidencefromlabourandtopincomeshares