Globalization and Regional Income Inequality

Globalization and Regional Income Inequality
Author: Guang Hua Wan,Ming Lu,Zhao Chen,United Nations University. World Institute for Development Economics Research
Publsiher: Unknown
Total Pages: 28
Release: 2006
Genre: Electronic Book
ISBN: 9291909238

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Globalization and Regional Income Inequality

Globalization and Regional Income Inequality
Author: Guang Hua Wan,Ming Lu,Zhao Chen
Publsiher: Unknown
Total Pages: 38
Release: 2004
Genre: Globalization
ISBN: UCSD:31822034234005

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Globalization Poverty and Income Inequality

Globalization  Poverty  and Income Inequality
Author: Richard Barichello,Arianto A. Patunru,Richard Schwindt
Publsiher: UBC Press
Total Pages: 280
Release: 2021-11-15
Genre: Political Science
ISBN: 9780774865647

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Globalization, Poverty, and Income Inequality examines the relationship between globalization and trade liberalization, and poverty and income inequality, using Indonesia as a case study. Contributors examine how advances in coffee certification, treatments for visual disabilities, and property rights, among other factors, have had both meritorious and deleterious effects on the local population. Ultimately, they describe an ambiguous relationship between trade liberalization and inequality, both of which can increase or decrease in proportion to one another depending on region and sector. This empirically driven work provides a nuanced view of the trade-poverty relationship, contributing balanced testimony to policy debates being held internationally.

Globalization and Inequality

Globalization and Inequality
Author: Raj Pruthi
Publsiher: Unknown
Total Pages: 330
Release: 2006
Genre: Equality
ISBN: STANFORD:36105127480742

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With special reference to Developing countries.

Inequality Growth and Poverty in an Era of Liberalization and Globalization

Inequality  Growth  and Poverty in an Era of Liberalization and Globalization
Author: Giovanni Andrea Cornia
Publsiher: Oxford University Press on Demand
Total Pages: 461
Release: 2004-03-18
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 9780199271412

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Within-country income inequality has risen since the early 1980s in most of the OECD, all transitional, and many developing countries. More recently, inequality has risen also in India and nations affected by the Asian crisis. Altogether, over the last twenty years, inequality worsened in 70 per cent of the 73 countries analysed in this volume, with the Gini index rising by over five points in half of them. In several cases, the Gini index follows a U-shaped pattern, with theturn-around point located between the late 1970s and early 1990s. Where the shift towards liberalization and globalization was concluded, the right arm of the U stabilized at the 'steady state level of inequality' typical of the new policy regime, as observed in the UK after 1990.Mainstream theory focusing on rises in wage differentials by skill caused by either North-South trade, migration, or technological change poorly explains the recent rise in income inequality. Likewise, while the traditional causes of income polarization-high land concentration, unequal access to education, the urban bias, the 'curse of natural resources'-still account for much of cross-country variation in income inequality, they cannot explain its recent rise.This volume suggests that the recent rise in income inequality was caused to a considerable extent by a policy-driven worsening in factorial income distribution, wage spread and spatial inequality. In this regard, the volume discusses the distributive impact of reforms in trade and financial liberalization, taxation, public expenditure, safety nets, and labour markets. The volume thus represents one of the first attempts to analyse systematically the relation between policy changes inspired byliberalization and globalization and income inequality. It suggests that capital account liberalization appears to have had-on average-the strongest disequalizing effect, followed by domestic financial liberalization, labour market deregulation, and tax reform. Trade liberalization had uncleareffects, while public expenditure reform often had positive effects.

Globalization and Inequality

Globalization and Inequality
Author: Elhanan Helpman
Publsiher: Harvard University Press
Total Pages: 232
Release: 2018-08-06
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 9780674988934

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Globalization is not the primary cause of rising inequality. That is the conclusion of this penetrating study by Elhanan Helpman, a leading expert on international trade. If we wish to curb inequality while protecting what is best about globalization, he shows, we must start with a clear view of how globalization does, and does not, shape our world.

Inequality Beyond Globalization

Inequality Beyond Globalization
Author: Christian Suter
Publsiher: LIT Verlag Münster
Total Pages: 399
Release: 2010
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 9783643800725

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This volume debates the complex nature of the relationships between globalization, social and economic transformations and growing inequalities. Employing a global, world-historical and comparative perspective, the 16 articles brought together in this volume deal with three central questions: Firstly, the question of the spatio-temporal evolution and variations of growing inequalities, secondly, the relative importance of globalization as compared to other factors explaining growing inequalities and, thirdly, institutional variations of inequality dynamics and globalization impacts. Christian Suter is Professor of Economic Sociology at the University of NeuchÃ?Â[tel and President of the World Society Foundation, domiciled at the University of Zurich, Switzerland.

The Evolution of World Income Inequality

The Evolution of World Income Inequality
Author: Andrés Solimano,United Nations. Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean. Economic Development Division
Publsiher: Santiago, Chile : [United Nations], ECLAC
Total Pages: 48
Release: 2001
Genre: Political Science
ISBN: UCSD:31822032362055

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In the last two centuries, the world has seen an unprecedented increase in the capacity to create material wealth and undergo technical change. At the same time, this is also a period of large disparities in income per head, living standards across and within countries and regions of the world. Large inequalities can eventually undermine global integration and social stability thus hampering long run growth prospects and the legitimacy of globalization. Policies to reduce global inequalities have to focus on raising growth rates of poorer countries, improving income distribution at the national level and facilitate some global redistribution to low-income nations.