%A Nicolas Pistolesi %J The Annals of Economics and Statistics %T Income and Consumption Risk : Evidence from France %X In this paper, we draw life cycle inequality profiles for cohorts born between 1921 and 1975 and observed from 1974 to 2005 from a pseudo-panel of French households. While cross-sectional inequality has not changed much over the period, the within cohort inequality has increased substantially with age. Using the interplay between income and consumption, we decompose the change in inequality into a permanent and a transitory component. The former, called income risk, measures shocks affecting income which are transmitted to consumption levels, while the latter affects income but can be smoothed and thus does not have an impact on the consumption distribution. We find that income risk increases with age, while transitory shocks remain broadly constant over a lifetime. The decomposition sheds light on the diverging trends over time between income and consumption inequality. Consumption inequality has increased since the middle of the nineties because the population has aged, and permanent shocks increase with age, while income inequality has not changed much because of negative transitory shocks that have compensated the permanents shocks. JEL: D31, D12. / KEY WORDS: Inequality, Consumption Distribution, Income Risk. %K Inequality %K Income Risk %K Consumption Distribution %P 347-377 %V vol. 114 %D 2014 %R 10.15609/annaeconstat2009.113-114.347 %I Association pour le développement de la recherche en économie et en statistique %L publications21787