Atkinson's work was predominantly on
income distributions. But he also worked on a wide field of other economic and social questions including
taxation,
wealth distribution, the economics of the
welfare state,
health economics, and
poverty. In his long career he published over 350 research papers and authored 24 books. Characteristic for much of his work is a combination of theoretical and applied perspectives.
Inequality His 1970 paper 'On the measurement of inequality' radically changed the way that economists think about the measurement of inequality. One contribution of this paper is that it introduced a new family of inequality measures that makes different views about distributional justice explicit through a parameter capturing the ‘inequality aversion’ of the measurer. This inequality measure–called the
Atkinson index–is named after him. Atkinson examined how the wealthy disproportionately influence public policy and influence governments to implement policies that protect wealth. He also advocated the introduction of a
basic income. He was one of the authors of the
Chartbook of Economic Inequality, a resource widely employed to study the history of inequality.
Global poverty He had a long-standing interest in the measurement of poverty. One of his most cited research papers is ‘On the measurement of poverty' from 1987. From 2013 to 2016 he chaired the World Bank's Commission on Global Poverty. The commission included
Amartya Sen,
Ana Revenga,
François Bourguignon,
Stefan Dercon and
Nora Lustig and had the objective to advise the international institutions on how to measure and monitor global poverty. The commission is usually referred to as the Atkinson Commission. Before his death he was working on a book on global poverty. Atkinson died before he was able to complete the book, but at his request it was edited for publication by two of his colleagues,
John Micklewright and
Andrea Brandolini. This book–'Measuring Poverty around the World'–was published posthumously in May 2019.
Public economics Since the 1960s he was one of the leading scholars to develop the discipline of public economics. In a joint article with
Joseph Stiglitz, he laid one of the cornerstones for the theory of
optimal taxation. Also jointly with Joseph Stiglitz he authored the seminal textbook “Lectures on Public Economics”. The book was reissued by Princeton University Press in 2015. In his 2015 publication
Inequality: What Can Be Done?, he "called for robust taxation of the rich whom he reckons have got off easily over the last generation." He recommended government intervention in markets such as employment guarantees and wage controls to influence the redistribution of economic rewards. He traced the history of inequality, coining the phrase the "inequality turn" to describe the period when household inequality began to rise around 1980. From the 1980s onwards, men and women "tended to marry those who earned like themselves", with rich women marrying rich men. As more women joined the workforce inequality increased. ==Influences==