Dynamics of Inequality and Poverty için kapak resmi
Başlık:
Dynamics of Inequality and Poverty
Yazar:
Kalb, Guyonne, editor.
ISBN:
9780762313501
Fiziksel Tanımlama:
<volume 13> : illustrations ; 24 cm.
Seri:
Research on Economic Inequality Ser.
İçerik:
CONTENTS LIST OF CONTRIBUTORS INTRODUCTION PART I: INEQUALITY AND POVERTY OVER EXTENDED PERIODS VULNERABLE HOUSEHOLDS AND VARIABLE INCOMES Sanqhamitra Bandyopadhyay and Frank A. Cowell 3 WHO ARE THE CHRONIC POOR? AN ECONOMETRIC ANALYSIS OF CHRONIC POVERTY IN GERMANY Martin Biewen SIMULATING COHORT LABOUR EARNINGS FOR AUSTRALIA Jusıin van de Ven THE DISTRIBUTIONAL EFFECTS OF TAXATION IN AUSTRALIA AND THE UNITED KJNGDOM: EVIDENCE FROM MICROSIMULATIONS Jusıin van de Ven WEALTH INEQUALITY: LIFETIME AND CROSS-SECTIONAL VIEWS Siman Kelly oii ix 31 63 81 123 V VI coNTENTS poVERTY P ART Ti: INTERGENERATIONAL TRANSFERS OF . DO POOR CHILDREN BECOME POOR ADULTS?, . LESSONS FROM A CROSS~COUNTRY CO:rvfPARJSON OF GENERATIONAL EARNINGS MOBILITY Miles Corak FAMILY SIZE AND CHILD ACHIEVEM · NT Nathan D. Grawe PARENTAL TNCOME AND THE CHOICE OF PARTICJPATION iN UNIVERSITY, POLYTECHNIC OR EMPLOYMENT AT AGE 18: A LONGITUDINAL STUDY Sholeh A. Maani ]43 ]89 217 PART III: INEQUALITY OVER TiME SKTLLS, COMPUTERIZATION AND INCOME INEQUALITY iN THE POSTWAR U.S. ECONOMY Edward N Woljf 251 BAYESIAN ASSESSMENT OF LORENZ AND STOCHASTIC DOMINANCE IN INCOME DISTRIBUTIONS Duangkamon Chotikapanich and William E. Griffiths 297 PART IV: MEASUREMENT ISSUES DEFINING AND MEASURING EXTREME POVERTY Paul Makdissi and Quentin Wodon 325 THEIL, INEQUALITY INDICES AND DECOMPOSITION Frank A. Cowell 341 LIST OF CONTRIBUTORS Sanqhamitra Bandyopadhyay Martin Biewen Duanqkamon Chotikapanich Mi/es Corak Frank A. Cowell Nathan D. Grawe Williaın E. Griffiıhs Siman Kelly Sholeh A. Maani Paul Makdissi Quentin Wodon University of Oxford and STTCERD, LSE and Political Science, London, UK Departrnent of Economics, Johann Wolfgang Goethe-University Frankfurt, Frankfurt, Germany Department of Econometrics and Business Statistics, Monash University, Melbourne, Australia Farnily and Labour Studies, Statistics Canada, Ottawa, Canada STICERD and Economics Department, London School of Economics and Political Science, London, UK Carleton College, Northfield, Minnesota, USA Departrnent of Economics, University of Melbourne, Melbourne, Australia National Centre for Social and Economic Modelling (NATSEM), University of Canberra, Australia Department of Economics, The University of Aucklarıd, Auckland, New Zealand Departement d'economique and GREDI, üniversite de Sherbrooke, Sherbrooke, Quebec, Canada AFTPM, World Bank, NW, Washington, DC, USA Vll
Özet:
This volume consists of a number of papers related to the theme of the dynamics of inequality and poverty. These are subdivided into four separate parts. The five chapters in Part I of this volume are concerned with inequality and poverty over extended time periods. Bandyopadhyay and Cowell deal with the concept of vulnerability in the context of income mobility of the poor. Biewen studies the extent and the composition of chronic poverty in Germany, comparing the results with the United Kingdom and the United States. Van de Ven describes a dynamic microsimulation model of cohort labour earnings based on the Australian population aged between 20 and 55 years, and considers how the widening social gap between the Australia and the UK is reflected by their redistributive systems, through the use of static and dynamic microsimulation. Kelly analyses the lifetime distribution of net worth in Australia using a dynamic microsimulation model to project the cross-sectional and lifetime asset holdings of a 5-year birth cohort over a period of 40 years. In Part II, the issue of intergenerational transfers of poverty is considered. Corak compares generational earnings mobility and the reasons for the degree to which the long run labour market success of children is related to that of their parents across countries. He provides a framework for understanding the underlying causal process as well as the conception of equality of opportunity, as a guide for public policy. Grawe uses data from the British National Childhood Development Study to examine the quality-quantity trade-off in fertility in multiple measures of child achievement. Maani examines the link between parental income and other resources during adolescent years, and higher education choices of the offspring at age 18, using a recent longitudinal data set from New Zealand. Part III is concerned with inequality over time. First, Wolff examines US inequality since the late 1940s, investigating the role of computer investment, dispersion of schooling and unionisation rate in the rise in inequality between 1968 and 2000. Second, Chotikapanich and Griffiths consider the question of testing for dominance in income distributions through the development of Bayesian methods of inference, which report on changes in income distributions in terms of the posterior probabilities. This allows an assessment of whether income distributions have changed over time. The final part of this volume is concerned with measurement issues. Makdissi and Wodon propose a measure of extreme poverty which is multidimensional in nature. It recognises the fact that there are interaction effects between different deprivations and that the length of time during which deprivations are felt may have a negative impact on household well-being. In the final contribution, Cowell examines Theil's approach to the measurement of inequality in the context of subsequent developments over recent decades. It focuses on the dynamics of inequality and poverty. It examines inequality and poverty over time, the intergenerational transfer of poverty, inequality over time, and measurement issues. The chapters discuss inequality and poverty in developed countries around the world, providing a multinational perspective.
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