Publication: Getting Real about Inequality : Evidence from Brazil, Colombia, Mexico, and Peru
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Date
2006-01
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Published
2006-01
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Abstract
Consumption baskets vary across households and inflation rates vary across goods. As a result, standard consumer price index (CPI) inflation may provide a misleading measure of the inflation actually faced by poor households, more so the more unequal the distribution of aggregate consumption across households. Likewise, changes in observed nominal consumption inequality may be very different from those in true inequality, that is, that measured using household-specific CPIs. The authors explore empirically these issues using household data covering nine episodes from four Latin American countries (Brazil, Colombia, Mexico, and Peru). They find that in these countries standard CPI inflation typically reflects the inflation rate faced by a rich consumer located in the 80 to 90 percentile of the distribution of consumption expenditure. In most episodes the authors also find that inflation was anti-rich-that is, the inflation faced by the richest consumers was higher than the inflation faced by the poorest consumers. As a result of this bias, the observed increases in nominal inequality generally exceed the actual changes in real inequality. These results are robust to correcting for quality change bias in the CPI, to the use of alternative price indices, and to the use of alternative inequality measures.
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“Goñi, Edwin; Servén, Luis; López, Humberto. 2006. Getting Real about Inequality : Evidence from Brazil, Colombia, Mexico, and Peru. Policy Research Working Paper; No. 3815. © World Bank. http://hdl.handle.net/10986/8796 License: CC BY 3.0 IGO.”
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