30 results
Search Results
2. Keeping Public Debt Sustainable in an Equitable Way.
- Author
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Furceri, Davide, Loungani, Prakash, Ostry, Jonathan D., and Pizzuto, Pietro
- Subjects
PUBLIC debts ,AUSTERITY ,INCOME inequality ,ECONOMIC forecasting ,ELECTRONIC benefits transfers ,GOVERNMENT securities ,ECONOMIC research - Published
- 2022
3. Earnings mobility, inequality, and economic growth in Argentina, Mexico, and Venezuela.
- Author
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Fields, Gary, Duval-Hernández, Robert, Freije, Samuel, and Sánchez Puerta, María
- Subjects
ECONOMIC research ,INCOME inequality - Abstract
This paper examines changes in individual earnings during positive and negative growth periods in three Latin American economies: Argentina, Mexico, and Venezuela. We ask two major questions. First, do panel income changes favor the income recipients who started at the top of the income distribution ('divergent mobility') or those who started at the bottom ('convergent mobility')? And second, are the groups that are found to gain the most when the economy is growing those that are found to lose the most when the economy is contracting ('symmetry of mobility') or is the pattern asymmetric in the sense that the same groups do best both in times of economic growth and in times of economic decline? We find support for the divergent mobility hypothesis only in scattered years in the cases of Mexico and Venezuela and no support at all in the case of Argentina. Rather, earnings mobility is most frequently convergent or neutral in all three countries. As for the symmetry of mobility hypothesis, we find that it is rejected in nearly all cases; rather, those groups that gain the most when the economy is growing are also the ones that gain the most or lose the least when the economy is contracting. Furthermore, we discuss how the absence of divergence reconciles with rising inequality in the countries under study. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. WELL-BEING INEQUALITY AND THE ECONOMIC CRISIS: EVIDENCE FROM LIFE IN TRANSITION SURVEYS IN EASTERN EUROPE.
- Author
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Botezat, Alina and Baciu, Livia
- Subjects
INCOME inequality ,FINANCIAL crises ,WELL-being ,SELF-report inventories ,ECONOMIC research ,ECONOMICS - Abstract
This paper examines the relationship between well-being inequality and the economic crisis for countries from Central and Eastern Europe. Using data from Life in Transition Surveys waves 2006 and 2010, we assess the level of happiness gap by computing the instrument-effect-corrected standard deviation. Our results indicate that the dispersion in self-reported well-being levels increased after the economic crisis in all considered countries. We also show that the life satisfaction variation is not necessarily higher for those who report being poor compared to those from the upper part of the income hierarchy. Results also suggest that in general the gaps are higher in the case of those who report being not affected at all by the economic crisis compared to those who report being affected to a large extent by the crisis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
5. DECOMPOSITION OF THE CHANGING INCOME INEQUALITY OF TAIWAN'S HOUSEHOLDS.
- Author
-
Chien-Liang Chen
- Subjects
MATHEMATICAL decomposition ,HOUSEHOLDS ,INCOME inequality ,EQUALITY ,ECONOMIC research - Abstract
This paper analyzes the deteriorating income inequality of Taiwan's house- holds over the past three decades through estimates of unconditional distribution and counterfactual decomposition. It is found that changes in the distribution of household characteristics and the corresponding coefficients significantly affect income distribution with prevalent heterogeneities across the conditional quantiles. Aging of the household heads is the main reason to explain the worsening inequality, in addition to changes of the head's schooling and gender, household size, existence of spouse, and earner numbers. Focusing on the changing trends of the distributional pattern of income, this paper sheds new light on the decomposition of Taiwan's income distribution that are different from those presented in the existing studies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
6. On the characterization and economic evaluation of income mobility as a process of distributional change.
- Author
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Allanson, Paul
- Subjects
INCOME inequality ,ECONOMIC mobility ,PUBLIC welfare ,ECONOMIC research - Abstract
The paper employs a rank-dependent formulation of the social welfare function with time-separable utilities to evaluate the economic consequences of the mobility process underlying the transformation of the income distribution over time. The resultant class of measures can be decomposed either in terms of structural and exchange mobility or in terms of vertical and horizontal mobility, thereby encompassing two major approaches in the literature. Illustrative results show that income mobility in the USA was both less pro-poor in absolute terms and more horizontally inequitable than in Germany, but that the latter did not translate into higher exchange mobility given higher levels of absolute inequality and the vertical stance of the growth process. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. THE EVOLUTION OF TOP INCOME AND WEALTH SHARES IN PORTUGAL SINCE 1936.
- Author
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GUILERA, JORDI
- Subjects
ECONOMIC research ,DISTRIBUTION (Economic theory) ,STATISTICS ,INCOME inequality ,WEALTH ,ECONOMIC development ,PORTUGUESE economy ,TWENTIETH century - Abstract
Copyright of Revista de Historia Económica / Journal of Iberian & Latin American Economic History is the property of Cambridge University Press and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Factor shares: the principal problem of political economy?
- Author
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Atkinson, A. B.
- Subjects
MARKET share ,MACROECONOMICS ,INTERNATIONAL trade ,INCOME inequality ,SOCIAL justice ,BUSINESS conditions ,ECONOMIC history ,TWENTY-first century ,ECONOMIC research - Abstract
This paper identifies three reasons for studying factor shares: to make a link between incomes at the macroeconomic level (national accounts) and incomes at the level of the household; to help understand inequality in the personal distribution of income; and to address the concern of social justice with the fairness of different sources of income. In each case, I explore the implications and point to ways in which the analysis could be taken forward in a twenty-first-century treatment of the classical problem of political economy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. The effects of measurement error and omitted variables when using transition matrices to measure intergenerational mobility.
- Author
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O'Neill, Donal, Sweetman, Olive, and Van de Gaer, Dirk
- Subjects
WAGES ,INTERGENERATIONAL mobility ,SOCIAL classes ,INCOME inequality ,ECONOMIC research - Abstract
This paper examines the consequences of specification error when transition matrices are used to analyse patterns of intergenerational mobility. We show that classical measurement error in both the child’s and parent’s earnings can lead to biased results, with summary mobility measures biased by as much as 20% in some cases. Furthermore our results suggest that the extent of the bias is most severe in the tails of the distribution. Omitted conditioning variables appear to have a modest effect on transition matrices in our model. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. The Debate Over US Public Debt: Overburdened or Overwrought?
- Author
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Eichengreen, Barry
- Subjects
PUBLIC debts ,TAX rates ,INCOME inequality ,MANAGERIAL economics ,INTEREST rates ,ECONOMIC research ,ECONOMIC policy - Published
- 2022
11. Quality, quantity and duration of lives.
- Author
-
Duclos, Jean‐Yves and Housseini, Bouba
- Subjects
GOVERNMENT policy ,INCOME inequality ,DISTRIBUTION (Economic theory) ,QUALITY of life ,ECONOMIC research - Abstract
Copyright of Canadian Journal of Economics is the property of Wiley-Blackwell and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Growth and Income Inequality: A Comparative Analysis.
- Author
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Binatli, Ayla Ogus
- Subjects
- *
ECONOMIC development , *INCOME inequality , *COMPARATIVE studies , *ECONOMIC research , *ECONOMIC policy , *DISTRIBUTION (Economic theory) - Abstract
This paper investigates whether the relationship between income inequality and growth changes over time. Two time periods, covering 1970-1985 and 1985-1999, are analyzed and compared. A statistically significant relationship between inequality and growth in either time period fails to emerge. However, there are indications that effect of inequality on growth may be different in the nineties when compared to the seventies. In the literature, a consistent negative effect of inequality on growth is documented although the significance of the effect is open to debate. This paper also finds a negative effect of income inequality on growth in the seventies but, although statistically insignificant, a consistently positive effect in the nineties. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2012
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. Lotteries, inequality, and market imperfection: Galor and Zeira go gambling.
- Author
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Gall, Thomas
- Subjects
ECONOMIC research ,CAPITAL market ,MORAL hazard ,RISK management in business ,DISTRIBUTION (Economic theory) ,INCOME inequality ,ECONOMICS - Abstract
This paper analyzes a simple extension to the work of Galor and Zeira (Rev Econ Stud 60:35–52, 1993). Allowing for endowment lotteries alters the dynamics of the model fundamentally: the poverty trap found in the original work vanishes for a wide class of parameters. Moreover, it turns out that in the presence of lotteries the relationship between the severity of credit market imperfections and long run aggregate income may be non-monotonic. We identify cases such that reducing the scope for moral hazard on the capital market decreases aggregate utility and may create a poverty trap and persistent income inequality in the economy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Emmanuel Saez: 2009 John Bates Clark Medalist.
- Author
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Bernheim, B. Douglas
- Subjects
ECONOMISTS ,ECONOMIC research ,FISCAL policy ,TAXATION ,INCOME inequality ,CORPORATE taxes ,SAVINGS ,AWARDS - Abstract
Emmanuel Saez, winner of the 2009 John Bates Clark Medal, has distinguished himself by making fundamental contributions concerning critical theoretical and empirical issues within the field of public economics. He is one of those exceptional scholars whose work reflects a broad and thoroughly integrated vision. In carefully and creatively implementing that vision, he has led a remarkable resurgence of interest in tax policy research over the last decade. Emmanuel's work can be divided into five areas: the theory of optimal taxes and transfers; the measurement of income and wealth distributions; the measurement of behavioral responses to personal taxation; the taxation of corporate dividends; and retirement saving. A great deal of his work is closely interrelated across these topics, which makes the whole considerably greater than the sum of the parts. In effect, he has bridged the chasm between theory and practical policymaking by attacking the policy design problem from both sides at once. This article provides a survey of Emmanuel's work. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Financial integration, capital mobility, and income convergence.
- Author
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Abiad, Abdul, Leigh, Daniel, and Mody, Ashoka
- Subjects
CAPITAL movements ,INTERNATIONAL finance ,INCOME inequality ,ECONOMIC research ,DEVELOPMENT economics ,EUROPEAN economic integration ,ECONOMIC conditions in Europe, 1945- ,ECONOMETRIC models - Abstract
Recent studies have found that capital moves ‘uphill’ from poor to rich countries, and brings little or no growth dividend when it does flow into poor economies. We show that Europe does not conform to this paradigm. In the European experience of financial integration, capital has flown from rich to poor countries, and such inflows have been associated with significant acceleration of income convergence. Analysing broader samples of countries, we find that ‘downhill’ capital flows tend to be observed above certain thresholds in institutional quality and financial integration. But Europe remains different even when allowing for such threshold effects, and its experience is similar to that of interstate flows within the United States. Our findings are consistent with the notion that financial diversification reduces countries’ incentives to save in order to self-insure against specific shocks. — Abdul Abiad, Daniel Leigh and Ashoka Mody [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2009
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Information-aggregation bias.
- Author
-
Goodfriend, Marvin
- Subjects
ECONOMIC research ,INFORMATION storage & retrieval systems ,INCOME ,PERMANENT income theory ,INCOME inequality ,TIME series analysis ,ELECTRONIC data processing - Abstract
Aggregation in the presence of data-processing lags distorts the information content of data, violating orthogonality restrictions that hold at the individual level. Though the phenomenon is general it is illustrated here for the life-cycle--permanent-income model. Cross-section and pooled-panel data induce information-aggregation bias akin to that in aggregate time series. Calculations show that information aggregation can seriously bias tests of the life-cycle model on aggregate time series, cross-section, and pooled-panel data. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1992
17. PITFALLS IN TESTING FOR COINTEGRATION BETWEEN INEQUALITY AND THE REAL INCOME.
- Author
-
Gueye, Ghislain N., Kim, Hyeongwoo, and Sorek, Gilad
- Subjects
INCOME inequality ,TAXATION ,REAL income ,ECONOMIC research - Abstract
Frank (2009) constructed a comprehensive panel of state-level income inequality measures using individual tax filing data from the Internal Revenue Service. Employing an array of cointegration exercises for the data, he reported a positive long-run relationship between income inequality and the real income per capita in the United States. This article questions the validity of his findings. First, we suggest a misspecification problem in his approach regarding the order of integration in the inequality index, which shows evidence of nonstationarity only for the post-1980 data. Second, we demonstrate that his findings are not reliable because the panel cointegration test he used requires cross-section independence, which is inappropriate for the U.S. state-level data. Employing panel tests that allow cross-section dependence, we find no evidence of cointegration between inequality and the real income. ( JEL D31, O40) [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Does High Inequality Attract High Skilled Immigrants?
- Author
-
Gould, Eric D. and Moav, Omer
- Subjects
INCOME inequality ,SKILLED labor ,FOREIGN workers ,EMIGRATION & immigration ,ECONOMIC research - Abstract
This study examines how the sources and levels of income inequality affect how a country attracts and retains high skilled workers. With parameter values that yield realistic levels of emigration, our model shows that emigration rates increase with education when the returns to education are higher abroad. However, the relationship between unobservable skills ('residual wages') and emigration can display an inverse U-shaped pattern, if unobservable skills are composed of both 'general' and 'country-specific' skills. Using data on Israeli emigrants before they decide to emigrate, we find strong empirical evidence in support of the model's predictions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. The Life Course Dynamics of Affluence.
- Author
-
Hirschl, Thomas A. and Rank, Mark R.
- Subjects
SOCIAL sciences ,ECONOMIC research ,EMPIRICAL research ,INCOME inequality ,LONGITUDINAL method - Abstract
Social science research finds that the only group to have experienced real economic gains over the past four decades is the top 20 percent of the income distribution. This finding, along with greater awareness of growing inequality, has renewed interest in mobility research that identifies how individuals and their progeny move into and out of upper versus lower income categories. In this study a new mobility methodology is proposed using life course concepts and life table statistical techniques. Panel data from a prospective national sample of the U.S. population age 25 to 60 are analyzed to estimate the extent of mobility associated with top percentiles in the income distribution. Empirical results suggest high mobility associated with top-level income. For example, 11 percent of the population is found to occupy the top one percentile for one or more years between the ages of 25 and 60. The study findings suggest that many experience short-term and/or intermittent mobility into top-level income, versus a smaller set that persist within top-level income over many consecutive years. Implications of the findings are discussed in terms of inequality buffering, opportunity versus insecurity, and the demographics of income inequality. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. REDISTRIBUTIVE POLITICS AND GOVERNMENT DEBT IN A BORROWING-CONSTRAINED ECONOMY.
- Author
-
Arawatari, Ryo and Ono, Tetsuo
- Subjects
PUBLIC debts ,CAPITAL market ,INCOME inequality ,GROSS domestic product ,ECONOMIC research - Abstract
We develop a two-period, three-class of income model where low-income agents are borrowing constrained because of capital market imperfections, and where redistributive expenditure is financed by tax and government debt. When the degree of capital market imperfection is high, there is an ends-against-the-middle equilibrium where the constrained low-income and the unconstrained high-income agents favour low levels of government debt and redistributive expenditure; these agents form a coalition against the middle. In this equilibrium, the levels of government debt and expenditure might be below the efficient levels, and the spread of income distribution results in a lower debt-to-GDP ratio. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Consumer boycott, household heterogeneity, and child labor.
- Author
-
Di Maio, Michele and Fabbri, Giorgio
- Subjects
HOUSEHOLDS ,CHILD labor ,PRODUCTION (Economic theory) ,INCOME inequality ,CONSUMER activism ,ECONOMIC research - Abstract
Consumer boycott campaigns against goods that are produced using child labor are becoming increasingly popular. Yet there is still no consensus on which are the effects of such type of activism on child labor in developing countries. In fact, if some agreement is to be found in the recent economic literature, it is that the boycott does not reduce child labor. We contribute to this discussion presenting a simple model which shows that there are conditions under which a consumer boycott reduces child labor. We consider a small country two-factor economy populated by heterogeneous households. The boycott affects both the adult and the child labor markets. We show that the effects are heterogeneous and depend on household characteristics and on the income distribution. We derive the conditions under which the consumer boycott reduces child labor not only for nonpoor households but also for some of the households whose' income is-before the boycott-under the subsistence level. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Involvement in environmental causes, does the joint effect between subjective income and the performance of the country matter?
- Author
-
Melgar, Natalia and Rossi, Máximo
- Subjects
ENVIRONMENTAL quality ,ENVIRONMENTAL economics ,INCOME inequality ,MACROECONOMICS ,ECONOMIC efficiency ,ECONOMIC research ,SURVEYS - Abstract
Copyright of Revista de Economía del Rosario is the property of Colegio Mayor de Nuestra Senora del Rosario and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2012
23. Demand, Structural Interdependence, and Economic Provisioning.
- Author
-
MONGIOVI, GARY
- Subjects
INDUSTRIAL organization (Economic theory) ,KEYNESIAN economics ,KALECKIAN Model of Growth & Distribution ,CAPITALISM ,ECONOMIC history ,ECONOMIC research ,INCOME inequality ,NEOCLASSICAL school of economics ,ECONOMIC demand ,HISTORY - Abstract
Industrial and post-industrial economies are characterized by a high degree of structural interdependence. Once an economy attains a level of economic development in which the technology enables a substantial portion of the population to enjoy a standard of living significantly above subsistence, 'the material needs' of the system become difficult to define because they are interconnected with the relations of production in complex ways. In particular, demand comes to play a key role in the subsequent development of the system. This article presents an intersectoral model that integrates Keynesian and Kaleckian elements onto the classical surplus approach. The aim of the model is to provide a non-neoclassical framework that can be used to analyze how demand, income distribution, and production are interconnected. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Effects of Patent Policy on Income and Consumption Inequality in a R&D Growth Model.
- Author
-
Chu, Angus C.
- Subjects
ECONOMIC research ,PATENT law ,INCOME -- Law & legislation ,CONSUMPTION (Economics) ,RESEARCH & development ,INCOME inequality - Abstract
To analyze the effects of patent policy on growth and inequality, this article develops a quality-ladder model with wealth heterogeneity and elastic labor supply. The model predicts that strengthening patent protection increases (a) economic growth by stimulating spending on research and development and (b) income inequality by raising the return on assets. Elastic labor supply creates an additional effect on income inequality. As for consumption inequality, the effect is ambiguous and depends on the elasticity of intertemporal substitution. Calibrating the model to the U.S. data shows that strengthening patent protection increases income inequality by more than consumption inequality, and this pattern is consistent with the data. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. From Labour to Capital: Intra-Village Inequality in Rural China, 1988-2006.
- Author
-
Zhou Yingying, Han Hua, and Harrell, Stevan
- Subjects
ECONOMIC research ,INCOME inequality ,INCOME & employment theory ,ECONOMIC systems ,RESEARCH institutes ,ETHNOGRAPHIC analysis ,AGRICULTURAL economics ,RURAL conditions - Abstract
Economic inequality has increased greatly in China since the end of state socialist industry and collective agriculture, but the story of inequality is much more complex than just the rural-urban and coastal-inland dichotomies or the relative contributions of inter-regional and intra-regional inequality. Even within inland rural areas, inequality between villages and within villages has also increased greatly. In 2005-06, we were fortunate to be able to work with the Sichuan Nationalities Research Institute to re-survey 90 per cent of 300 families in three villages that we had originally surveyed in 1988. On the basis of these surveys and of ethnographic information, we found that income inequality had increased quite dramatically in all three villages. In structural terms, the primary reason for this increase was the shift from labour power to small-scale capital as the primary source of family income, a shift that occurred differently in each village. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Relativity, Rank and the Utility of Income.
- Author
-
Rablen, Matthew D.
- Subjects
RELATIVITY ,ECONOMIC research ,DISTRIBUTION (Economic theory) ,INCOME inequality ,PROSPECTING costs ,LOSS aversion - Abstract
Relative utility has become an important concept in several disjoint areas of economics. I present a cardinal model of income utility based on the supposition that agents care about their rank in the income distribution and that utility is subject to adaptation over time. Utility levels correspond to the Leyden Individual Welfare Function while utility differences yield a version of the prospect theory value function, thereby providing a new and shared derivation of each. I offer an explanation of some long-standing paradoxes in the wellbeing literature and an insight into the links between relative comparisons and loss aversion. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2008
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. How Does a Policymaker Rank Regional Income Distributions across Years? A Study on the Evolution of Greek Regional per Capita Income.
- Author
-
Liontakis, Angelos
- Subjects
INCOME inequality ,STOCHASTIC dominance ,ECONOMIC research ,ECONOMIC expansion ,INCOME - Abstract
This study examines the evolution of the regional per capita income from the perspective of a policymaker at the national level. To do that, it utilizes stochastic dominance analysis by including a utility function that expresses the "regional inequalities aversion" level of the policymaker. In this way, the analysis indicates how the policymakers rank income distributions according to their primary policy objectives and more specifically, GDP growth and diminishing of income inequalities. Data refer to the per capita GDPs of the Greek prefectures during the period 2000–2017, in real terms. The estimation of certainty equivalents provides a numeric index of preference among regional income distributions according to the policy objectives mix. Results indicate that the period 2000–2017 is characterized by different patterns of regional income evolutions. Overall, there is no regional convergence from year 2000 to 2017, while the evolution of regional income does not follow a constant path. The analysis provides thoughtful insights into the way that different policy targets and preferences can affect the relevant ranking of income distributions. In a certain level of policymakers' "regional inequalities aversion", a balance between economic growth and diminishing of regional inequalities targets is assumed. Apart from a useful tool in economic research, this quantification approach can also be utilized in policy design for setting more appropriate policy targets, based on the preferences of policymakers at the national level. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Economic Crisis and Regulation Theory: Review of International Conference of Research & Regulation 2015
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Just Luck: An Experimental Study of Risk-Taking and Fairness
- Author
-
Cappelen, Alexander W., Konow, James, Sørensen, Erik Ø., and Tungodden, Bertil
- Published
- 2013
30. Inter-Governmental Funds Flows in Pakistan: Are they Reducing Poverty? [with Comments]
- Author
-
Ahmed, Qazi Masood, Lodhi, Akhtar, and Anwar, Talat
- Published
- 2009
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