Monica Das,Sandwip Kumar Das

Economic Growth and Income Disparity in BRIC

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The recent interest in the development processes of BRIC countries (Brazil, Russia, India and China) has been triggered by their high growth performance, but their political and social backgrounds are entirely different. This book traces the economic history of BRIC countries to understand their economic and social institutions. The only common theme in this growth story is the high levels of income disparities and poverty that are observed even during the high growth decades. In order to understand the interaction between economic growth, income inequality and poverty, the book develops a theoretical framework that incorporates a mechanism of uniform income transfers in a growth model, where economic growth is the result of accumulation. Income transfer mechanism operates in all countries in the form of a progressive taxation system, pension funds, government's anti-poverty programs, employment guarantee schemes, land reforms, etc. It is not necessarily true that such income transfers would invariably reduce growth rates. The relationship between economic growth and income inequality depends on certain initial conditions. For instance, if the initial distribution of income is fairly unequal, growth induces greater equality. On the other hand, at high levels of per capita incomes, growth may raise inequality if the initial level of inequality is not very high. This brings a new dimension in the “inverted-U hypothesis.” Based on econometric modeling of growth-inequality nexus, the book examines the patterns of growth and economic disparities in BRIC countries over long periods of time, including the recent high growth phase. Two inequality measures applied in this study are Gini Coefficient and Theil's entropy measures, depending on data availability. Attempts have been made to identify the sources of inequality and the role of initial conditions in determining the patterns of development. Each country's experience is unique, but the theoretical model goes a long way to explain their growth-inequality experience.
Contents:Introduction: BRIC and the World EconomyPolitical and Economic History of BRIC:BrazilRussiaIndiaChinaEconomic Growth, Income Inequality, and Poverty:Growth Models and Growth–Inequality RelationshipInequality MeasuresUniform Income TransfersGrowth and DistributionDescriptive Statistics and Basic Regression Estimates for BRIC:IndiaChinaBrazilRussiaGrowth and Inequality in BRIC: Econometric Estimation:Estimation Method and Framework: The Varying Coefficient ModelFramework, Data, and ResultsCase of IndiaCase of ChinaCase of BrazilCase of RussiaRegression with Low versus High Inequality SubgroupsRegression with Low Growth versus High Growth SubgroupsRegression Results with Low Corruption versus High Corruption SubgroupsRegression Results with Role of Government Spending
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  • Elena Knowshas quoted9 years ago
    For instance, using average income as the benchmark, we classify the sample into two groups: the deprived group and the affluent group. The sample classification also provides experiences of low and high inequality subgroups, low and high growth subgroups, and low and high corruption subgroups.
    We have benefitted from the commen
  • Elena Knowshas quoted9 years ago
    Each country’s experience is unique, but the theoretical model goes a long way to explain their growth–inequality experience.
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