Bergstrom, KatyDodds, William2020-01-092020-01-092020-01https://hdl.handle.net/10986/33151This paper argues that labor supply elasticities encode information about the determinants of income inequality. In the theoretical framework, individuals choose labor supply conditional on productivities and preferences for consumption relative to leisure. The paper shows that reduced-form labor supply elasticities allow one to isolate the components of income due to productivities versus preferences. The paper then investigates what labor supply elasticities imply about the importance of productivities versus preferences in the United States. Estimates from the literature imply productivities drive most of income inequality. Larger income effects and larger differences between income and hours worked elasticities imply preferences play an increasingly important role.CC BY 3.0 IGOLABOR PRODUCTIVITYLABOR SUPPLYELASTICITYINCOME INEQUALITYPREFERENCEUsing Labor Supply Elasticities to Learn about Income InequalityWorking PaperWorld BankThe Role of Productivities versus Preferences10.1596/1813-9450-9102