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THEMICROECONOMICS
OF INCOMEDISTRIBUTION
DYNAMICS
IN EASTASIAANDLATIN AMERICA
François Bourguignon
Francisco H. G. Ferreira
Nora Lustig
Editors
THE MICROECONOMICS OF
INCOME DISTRIBUTION
DYNAMICS INEAST ASIA
AND LATIN AMERICA
[...]... Earnings and Household Incomein Mexico, 1984 and 1994 Characteristics ofthe Labor Force in Mexico, 1984 and 1994 Selected Results from Earnings Equations for Mexico Decomposition of Changes in Inequality in Earnings and Household Incomein Mexico, 1984–94 Rural Effect inthe Decomposition of Changes in Inequality in Earnings and Household Incomein Mexico, 1984–94 Evolution of the Structure of the. .. trends in the distributionof income and with the pace of economic development (see table 1.1) For example, during 1980–2000, growth in GDP per capita was considerably higher inEastAsia than inLatinAmerica Also, LatinAmerica showed higher initial levels ofincome inequality and (with the exception of Brazil) sharper upward trends as well In most economies, however, the average years of schooling, the. .. Society (in particular in LatinAmericaandthe Far East) ; ofthe European Economic Association (in Venice); ofthe Network on Inequality and Poverty ofthe IDB, World Bank, and LACEA (Latin American and Caribbean Economic Association); and at the Universities of Brasília, Maryland, and Michigan, The Catholic University of Rio de Janeiro, the European University Institute in Florence, and DELTA (Département... recommendations should also be informed by more in- depth country studies The method proposed is applied to seven economies in this volume: three inEastAsiaand four inLatin America. 4 TheEast Asian economies are Indonesia, Malaysia, and Taiwan (China) TheLatin American ones are Argentina (Greater Buenos Aires), Brazil (urban), Colombia, and Mexico.5 LatinAmericaandEastAsia have had rather different experiences... household income distributions The approach thus applies to problems related to thedistributionof total income, rather than only those related to thedistributionof earnings The method can shed light on the evolution ofthe entire distribution, rather than merely on the path of summary statistics And it can decompose any change inthe incomes of a set of households into its fundamental sources: changes in. .. increased only slightly in Taiwan, China, but it rose substantially in Indonesia and intheLatin American countries Average family sizes went down everywhere, falling by a full person or more in Brazil and Colombia In terms of economic growth, the disparity of experiences fits neatly into the expected continental lines The three Asian economies grew so fast since the end ofthe 1970s that income per capita... accompanied by changes in the structure ofthe economy that have repercussions on incomedistribution Nevertheless, the net outcome in terms ofthe change inthe Gini coefficient is far from uniform It ranges from a decline of 0.4 Gini points in (urban) Brazil to a rise of 8.4 Gini points in (the Greater Buenos Aires area of) Argentina However, these changes are not perfectly comparable across the seven economies... affect thedistributionof welfare has been rudimentary by comparison Yet understanding development andthe process of poverty reduction requires understanding not only how total income grows within a country but also how its distribution behaves over time Our knowledge ofthedynamicsofincomedistribution is presently limited, in part because ofthe informational inefficiency ofthe scalar inequality... schooling, the share of urban population, andthe participation of women inthe labor force rose, while the average size of households fell Given the similar demographic and educational trends in practically all the economies, what explains the differences inthe evolution of inequality? We hope that learning about the forces at work inthe Asian andLatin American contexts will provide new insights for development... its own income distribution, with its own mean and its own level of inequality.1 These models show that different combinations of initial conditions andofthe historical processes that might follow them—could lead to diverse outcomes In this book, we do not suggest yet another grand theory ofthedynamicsofincomedistribution during the process of development Instead, we propose and apply a methodology . Lustig
Editors
THE MICROECONOMICS OF
INCOME DISTRIBUTION
DYNAMICS IN EAST ASIA
AND LATIN AMERICA