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N° 100 |
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Issue 4, 2004 |
Declining
International Inequality and Economic Divergence:
Reviewing the Evidence Through Different Lenses |
François Bourguignon
Victoria Levin
David Rosenblatt |
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In recent years,
an ample literature has emerged on the evolution of global inequality during the
last two decades. A few stylized facts emerge. If one weights countries by their
population, then inequality across countries has declined. However, if one treats
countries equally – as in the macroeconomic convergence (divergence) literature—then
there has been increasing inequality. Which view is the correct one?
In this paper, we use the 2004 version of the World Bank’s World Development
Indicators to re-examine the evidence over the 1980-2002 period, and the data
reaffirm the two trends described above. Even if inequality declined by most common
aggregate inequality indices, there is neither full Lorenz dominance of 2002 over
1980 in population-weighted terms, nor first-order dominance.
The aggregate inequality indices also mask the tremendous mobility of countries,
and in particular, the impoverishment of about two dozen countries at the bottom
of the distribution over the period in question. Tracking mobility is a less “anonymous”
approach to the analysis, and it also can explain divergent views on increasing
or decreasing international inequality. If one cares only about final outcomes
and not initial starting positions, then inequality decreased by most criteria.
However, if mobility itself is part of the welfare criteria, and if one is willing
to put more weight on those countries that have lost, then the world distribution
of income has worsened. |
Abstract |
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Full
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Income
Distribution; Inequality; Convergence; Mobility; Growth |
Keywords |
D30;
D31; D63; F0; I30; O00 |
JEL classification |
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