Ramirez-Rondan, N.R. and Terrones, Marco E. and Winkelried, Diego (2020): Equalizing growth: The case of Peru.
Preview |
PDF
MPRA_paper_104691.pdf Download (2MB) | Preview |
Abstract
Following the economic and political reforms of the 1990s, the Peruvian economy experienced two decades of exceptional growth in the 2000s. How was inequality affected by the strong growth performance of 2004-19? Which were the main factors associated with these inequality changes? The distribution of both income and consumption in Peru was highly unequal in 2004, with important geographic and regional differences. Since then, the degree of economic disparity decreased significantly associated with the exceptional growth of 2004–19. This decline in inequality was broad-based, yet it was not homogeneous across geographic areas, regions, or time. A correlate of this reduction in inequality has been a falling polarization. While wages and, to a lesser extent, government transfers accounted for most of the decline in income inequality, food prepared at home played a pivotal role in reducing consumption inequality, particularly in rural areas.
Item Type: | MPRA Paper |
---|---|
Original Title: | Equalizing growth: The case of Peru |
English Title: | Equalizing growth: The case of Peru |
Language: | English |
Keywords: | Inequality, distribution, consumption, income, Peru. |
Subjects: | D - Microeconomics > D3 - Distribution > D31 - Personal Income, Wealth, and Their Distributions E - Macroeconomics and Monetary Economics > E2 - Consumption, Saving, Production, Investment, Labor Markets, and Informal Economy > E24 - Employment ; Unemployment ; Wages ; Intergenerational Income Distribution ; Aggregate Human Capital ; Aggregate Labor Productivity O - Economic Development, Innovation, Technological Change, and Growth > O1 - Economic Development > O15 - Human Resources ; Human Development ; Income Distribution ; Migration |
Item ID: | 104691 |
Depositing User: | Marco E. Terrones |
Date Deposited: | 16 Dec 2020 02:08 |
Last Modified: | 16 Dec 2020 02:08 |
References: | Abdelkrim, A. and Duclos, J. Y. (2007). DASP: Distributive analysis Stata package. Technical report, PEP, World Bank, UNDP and Universit´e Laval. Amarante, V. (2016). Income inequality in Latin America: A factor component analysis. Review of Income and Wealth, 62(S1):S4–S21. Benabou, R. (1996). Inequality and growth. In Bernanke, B. and Rotemberg, J., editors, NBER Macroeconomics Annual 1996, chapter 1, pages 11–92. MIT Press. Benjamin, D., Brandt, L., and McCaig, B. (2017). Growth with equity: Income inequality in Vietnam, 2002-14. Journal of Economic Inequality, 15(1):25–46. Berg, A., Ostry, J., Tsangarides, C., and Yakhshilikov, Y. (2018). Redistribution, inequality, and growth: New evidence. Journal of Economic Growth, 23(3):259–305. Bourguignon, F. (2015). Appraising income inequality databases in Latin America. Journal of Economic Inequality, 13(4):557–578. Cord, L., Genoni, M. E., and Rodriguez-Castelan, C. (2015). Overview. In Cord, L., Genoni, M. E., and Rodriguez-Castelan, C., editors, Shared Prosperity and Poverty Eradication in Latin America and the Caribbean, chapter 1, pages 1–44. The World Bank. Cowell, F. and Litchfield, J. (1999). Income inequality comparison with dirty data: the UK and Spain during the 1980. Research Paper DARP 45, LSE STICERD. Cruz Saco, M. A., Seminario, B., and Campos, C. (2018). Desigualdad (re)considerada Peru 1997–2015. Journal of Economics, Finance and International Business, 2(1):13–52. Deaton, A. (2005). Measuring poverty in a growing world (or measuring growth in a poor world). Review of Economics and Statistics, 87(1):1–19. Dimelis, S. and Livada, A. (1999). Inequality and business cycles in the US and European Union countries. International Advances in Economic Research, 5:321–338. Easterly, W. (2001). The middle class consensus and economic development. Journal of Economic Growth, 6(4):317–336. Esteban, J. and Ray, D. (2011). Linking conflict to inequality and polarization. American Economic Review, 101(4):1345–1374. Ferreira, F. H. G., Messina, J., Rigolini, J., Lopez-Calva, L. F., Lugo, M. A., and Vakis, R. (2013). Economic mobility and the rise of the Latin American middle class. The World Bank, Washington D.C. Flachsbarth, I., Schotte, S., Lay, J., and Garrido, A. (2018). Rural structural change, poverty and income distribution: Evidence from Peru. Journal of Economic Inequality, 16(4):631–653. Foster, J. and Lustig, N. (2019). Choosing an inequality index. In United Nations Develolpment Programme, editor, Human Development Report 2019, chapter 3, Spotlight 3.3, pages 136–138. UNDP. Foster, J. and Wolfson, M. (2010). Polarization and the decile of the middle class: Canada and the US. Journal of Economic Inequality, 8(2):247–273. Gasparini, L., Cruces, G., Tornarolli, L., and Mej´ıa, D. (2011). Recent trends in income inequality in Latin America. Economia, 11(2):147–201. Gasparini, L., Molina, E., and Olivieri, S. (2008). Income polarization in Latin America: Patterns and links with institutions and conflict. Oxford Development Studies, 36(4):461– 484. Genoni, M. E. and Salazar, M. (2015). Steering towards shared prosperity in Peru. In Cord, L., Genoni, M. E., and Rodriguez-Castelan, C., editors, Shared Prosperity and Poverty Eradication in Latin America and the Caribbean, chapter 8, pages 269–301. World Bank, Washington, DC. Ghoshray, A., Monfort, M., and Ordonez, J. (2020). Re-examining inequality persistence. Economics: The Open-Access, Open-Assessment E-Journal, 14(2020-1):1–9. Goderis, B. and Malone, S. (2011). Natural resource booms and inequality: Theory and evidence. Scandinavian Journal of Economics, 113(2):388–417. Hacibedel, B., Mandon, P., Muthoora, P., and Pouokam, N. (2019). Inequality in good and bad times: A cross–country approach. Working Paper WP/19/20, IMF. Herrera, J. (2017). Poverty and economic inequalities in Peru during the boom in growth: 2004-14. In Carbonnier, G., H. C. y. S. T. V., editor, Alternative Pathways to Sustainable Development: Lessons from Latin America, chapter 8, pages 138–173. Brill Nijhoff. Inchauste, G., Olivieri, S., Saavedra, J., and Winkler, H. (2012). What is behind the decline in poverty since 2000? Evidence from Bangladesh, Peru and Thailand. Policy Research Working Paper Series 6199, World Bank. INEI (2019). Evolucion de la pobreza monetaria 2007–2018. Informe tecnico Lib1646, Instituto Nacional de Estadistica e Informatica. Krueger, D. and Perri, F. (2006). Does income inequality lead to consumption inequality? evidence and theory. Review of Economic Studies, 73(1):163–193. Lerman, R. I. and Yitzhaki, S. (1985). Income inequality effects by income source: A new approach and applications in the united states. Reviews of Economics and Statistics, 67(1):151–156. Loayza, N. and Rigolini, J. (2016). The local impact of mining on poverty and inequality: Evidence from the commodity boom in Peru. World Development, 84(C):219–234. Lopez–Calva, L. and Lustig, N. (2010). Explaining the decline in inequality in Latin America: Technological change, educational upgrading, and democracy. In Declining Inequality in Latin America: A Decade of Progress?, chapter 1, pages 1–24. Brookings Institution Press. Lustig, N., Pessino, C., and Scott, J. (2014). The impact of taxes and social spending on inequality and poverty in Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Mexico, Peru, and Uruguay. Public Finance Review, 42(3):287–303. Mendoza, W., Leyva, J., and Flor, J. L. (2011). La distribucion del ingreso en el Peru: 1980- 2010. Revista CIS, 9(15):27–50. Morley, S. (2017). Changes in rural poverty in Peru 2004-2012. Latin American Economic Review, 26(1):Article 1. Murphy, K. and Topel, R. (2016). Human capital investment, inequality and economic growth. Journal of Labor Economics, 34(S2):S99–S127. Paz, P. and Urrutia, C. (2015). Economic growth and wage stagnation in Peru: 1998-2012. Review of Development Economics, 19(2):328–345. Rani, U. and Furrer, M. (2016). Decomposing income inequality into factor income components: Evidence from selected G20 countries. ILO Research Paper 15, International Labour Organization. Robles, A. and Robles, M. (2016). Changes in welfare with a heterogeneous workforce: The case of Peru. In Income Inequality Around the World, volume 44 of Research in Labor Economics, chapter 3, pages 79–107. Emerald Publishing Ltd. Romer, D. (1986). Increasing returns and long–run growth. Journal of Political Economy, 94(5):1002–1037. Rossini, R. and Santos, A. (2015). Peru’s recent economic history: From stagnation, disarray, and mismanagement to growth, stability, and quality policies. In Santos, A. and Werner, A., editors, Peru, Staying the Course of Economic Success, chapter 2, pages 9–33. International Monetary Fund. Shorrocks, A. (1982). Inequality decomposition by factor components. Econometrica, 50(1):193–211. Stampini, M., Robles, M., Saenz, M., Ibarraran, P., and Medellin, N. (2016). Poverty, vulnerability, and the middle class in Latin America. Latin American Economic Review, 25(1): Article 4. Szekely, M. and Mendoza, P. (2016). Declining inequality in Latin America: Structural shift or temporary phenomenon? Oxford Development Studies, 45(2):204–221. Terrones, M.E. (1990). Influence activities and economic growth. UWO Department of Economics Working Papers 9006, University of Western Ontario. Winkelried, D. and Torres, J. (2019). Economic mobility along the business cycle. The case of Peru. Applied Economics, 51(18):1894–1906. World Bank (2014). Inequality in a lower growth Latin America. Technical report, World Bank Group. World Bank (2017). Peru: Systematic country diagnostic. Technical report, World Bank Group. Yamada, G., Castro, J. F., and Bacigalupo, J. (2012). Desigualdad monetaria en un contexto de rapido crecimiento economico: El caso reciente del Peru. Revista Estudios Economicos, 24:65–77. |
URI: | https://mpra.ub.uni-muenchen.de/id/eprint/104691 |