Weintraub's consumption coefficient, the ratio of total consumer expenditur
e to income from employment, helps to elucidate trends in the sectoral and
functional distributions of income. It simplifies and adds precision to Kal
eckian macroeconomics by showing how distributions of income affect the lev
el of economic activity. Empirical estimates of the coefficient are present
ed for the UK from 1972 to 1995. From 1975 onwards, the coefficient has ind
icated a marked redistribution of income in favour of capitalist (non-emplo
yment) income, accompanied by a significant rise in the average propensity
to consume from capitalist (non-employment income). Wealth effects induced
by the housing boom of the 1980s have enabled capitalists' income and consu
mption to continue to increase after 1989 despite a fall in investment.