The Political Economy of the BRICS Countries. Группа авторов

The Political Economy of the BRICS Countries - Группа авторов


Скачать книгу
the degree of inequality in the space of income and wealth is no less in India than that in China and the Latin American high inequality countries. Brazil’s transition from ‘un-aimed opulence’ to a more inclusive approach based on active social policies can be a lesson for India which is clearly faltering on the task of making the growth process inclusive.

      References

      Anand, S. (1983). Inequality and Poverty in Malaysia: Measurement and Decomposition, Oxford: Oxford University Press.

      Atkinson, A. B. (2015). Inequality: What Can Be Done? Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press.

      Beteille, A. (ed.) (1983). Equality and Inequality: Theory and Practice, New Delhi: Oxford University Press.

      Beteille, A. (2012). “India’s Destiny Not Caste in Stone”, The Hindu, February 21, 2012. Available at: http://www.thehindu.com/opinion/lead/indias-destiny-not-caste-in-stone/article2913662.ece.

      Bucciferro, J. R. (2017). “Racial inequality in Brazil from independence to the present”, in L. Bértola and J. Williamson (eds.), Has Latin American Inequality Changed Direction? Cham: Springer.

      Cornia, G. A. (2015). “Income inequality in Latin America”, UNU-WIDER Working Paper, 2015/020.

      Deshpande, A. (2000). “Does caste still define disparity? A look at inequality in Kerala, India”, The American Economic Review, 90(2): Papers and Proceedings of the 112th Annual Meeting of the American Economic Association, May, 2000, pp. 322–325.

      Dev, S. M. (2016). “The Problem of Inequality”, Malcolm Adiseshiah Memorial Lecture.

      Dreze, J. and A. Sen (1995). India: Economic Development and Social Opportunity, Oxford: Oxford University Press.

      Elbers, C., P. Lanjouw, J. Mistiaen and B. Ozler (2008). “Re-interpreting sub-group inequality decompositions”, Journal of Economic Inequality, 6(3): 1569–1721.

      Marteleto, L. J. (2012). “Educational inequality by race in Brazil, 1982-2007: Structural changes and shifts in racial classification”, Demography, 49: 337–358.

      Milanovic, B. (2016). Global Inequality: A New Approach for the Age of Globalization, Cambridge: Harvard University Press.

      Mitra, A. and D. Ray (2014). “Implications of an economic theory of conflict: Hindu–Muslim violence in India”, Journal of Political Economy, 122(4): 719–765.

      Mutatkar, R. (2005). “Social Group Disparities and Poverty in India”, Indira Gandhi Institute of Development Research, Working Paper Series No. WP-20005-004.

      Panagariya, A. and V. More (2013). “Poverty by Social, Religious & Economic Groups in India and its Large States: 1993–94 to 2011–12”, Working Paper No. 2013-02, Columbia University, Program on Indian Economic Policies, USA.

      Ray Chaudhury, A. (2014). Horizontal Inequality: Concept, Measurement and Determinants, PhD thesis, University of Calcutta.

      Reddy, S. G. and A. Jayadev (2011). “Inequalities between groups: Theory and empirics”, World Development, 39(2): 159–173.

      Sen, A. (1980). “Equality of what?”, in S. M. McMurrin (ed.), Tanner Lectures on Human Values, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

      Stewart, F., G. Brown and L. Mancini (2005). “Why Horizontal Inequalities Matter: Some Implications for Measurement”, CRISE Working Paper No. 19, June.

      Stiglitz, J. (2013). The Price of Inequality. London: Penguin Books.

      Subramanian, S. (2011). “Inter-group disparities in the distributional analysis of human development: concepts, measurement, and illustrative applications”, Review of Black Political Economy, 38: 27–52.

      1To name a few, Stiglitz (2013), Piketty (2014), Atkinson (2015) and Milanovic (2016).

      2Cornia (2015) observes that between 2002 and 2010 inequality fell, although to a different extent and with different timing, in all the Latin American countries except Nicaragua and Costa Rica.

      3Here they have taken only rural India, which held roughly three-fourths of India’s population at the beginning of this millennium.

      CHAPTER 5

      Inequality and Poverty in India and Brazil Since the 1990s: A Comparative Analysis*

      Sripad Motiram

       Department of Economics, University of Massachusetts, Boston, USA

      Introduction

      In light of the above, in the second and third sections, I examine inequality and poverty in India and Brazil, respectively. I draw upon secondary literature to do so, including several of my own contributions on India. In the fourth section, I provide an explanation for the trends documented and present a comparison of the India and Brazil. The final section concludes.

      Inequality and Poverty in India Since the Onset of Economic Reforms


Скачать книгу