A Normal Relationship? Poverty, Growth, and Inequality

Published
2006-01
Journal
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Abstract
Using a large cross-country income distribution dataset spanning close to 800 country-year observations from industrial and developing countries, the authors show that the size distribution of per capita income is well approximated empirically by a lognormal density. The 0 hypothesis that per capita income follows a lognormal distribution cannot be rejected-although the same hypothesis is unambiguously rejected when applied to per capita consumption. The authors show that lognormality of per capita income has important implications for the relative roles of income growth and inequality changes in poverty reduction. When poverty reduction is the overriding policy objective, poorer and relatively equal countries may be willing to tolerate modest increases in income inequality in exchange for faster growth-more so than richer and highly unequal countries.Citation
“Lopez, J. Humberto; Servén, Luis. 2006. A Normal Relationship? Poverty, Growth, and Inequality. Policy Research Working Paper; No. 3814. World Bank, Washington, DC. © World Bank. https://openknowledge.worldbank.org/handle/10986/8791 License: CC BY 3.0 IGO.”
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