An International Monetary Fund (IMF) report analyzed income
inequalities in Asia, based on data provided by 22 countries
The report showed that that the top ten percent of income
earners in South Korea accounted for 45 percent of the nation's entire income
distribution as of 2013, the highest among Asian countries surveyed.
Singapore followed in second with its top ten percent
bracket behind 42 percent of the country's total. Japan’s highest ten percent
made up 41 percent.
While the
comparative figures for New Zealand, Australia and Malaysia were 32, 31 and 22
percent, respectively.
In 1995, South Korea's top ten percent earned 29 percent of
the total income distribution. The 2013 figure was 16 percentage points higher.
During the same period, other Asian countries saw similar tallies grow only by
one to two percentage points. South Korea’s most recent tally hints at rising
inequality attributed to rapid aging, large wage gaps for regular and
non-regular workers and gender occupational inequality.
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