Inequality, poverty, and resilience to economic shrinking

Anthony Smythe, Igor Martins, Martin Andersson
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Purpose With the recognition that generating economic growth is not the same as sustaining it, the challenge to catch-up and growth literature is discerning between these processes. Recent research suggests that the decline in the frequency of “shrinking” episodes is more important for long-term development than higher growth rates. By using a framework centred around social capabilities, this study aims to investigate the effects of income inequality and poverty on economic shrinking frequency, as opposed to previous literature that has exclusively had a growth focus. The aim is to investigate how and why some societies might be more resilient to economic shrinking. Design/methodology/approach The research is a quantitative study, and the authors build a longitudinal data set including 23 developing countries throughout 42 years to test the paper’s purpose. This study uses country and period fixed-effects specifications as well as cross-sectional graphical representations to investigate the relationship between proxies of economic inclusivity and the frequency of shrinking episodes. Findings The authors demonstrate that while inclusive societies are more resilient to shrinking overall, it is changes in poverty levels, but not changes in income inequality, that appear to be correlated with economic shrinking frequency. Inequality, while still an important element to explain countries’ growth potential as an initial condition, does not seem to make the sample more resilient to shrinking. The authors conclude that the mechanisms in which poverty and inequality are correlated with the catch-up process must run through different channels. Ultimately, processes that explain growth may intersect but not always overlap with the ones that explain resilience to shrinking. Originality/value The need for inclusive growth in long-term development has been championed for decades, yet inclusion has seldom been explored from the shrinking perspective. Though poverty reduction is already an important mainstream political objective, this paper differentiates itself by providing an alternate viewpoint of why this is important. Income inequality could have more of an economic growth limiting effect, while poverty reduction could be required to build resilience to economic shrinking. Developing countries will need both growth and resilience to shrinking, to catch-up with higher-income economies, which policymakers might need to balance carefully.
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不平等、贫困和抵御经济萎缩的能力
认识到产生经济增长与维持经济增长并不相同,追赶和增长文献的挑战在于区分这两个过程。最近的研究表明,对于长期发展而言,“萎缩”发作频率的下降比更高的增长率更为重要。通过使用以社会能力为中心的框架,本研究旨在调查收入不平等和贫困对经济萎缩频率的影响,而不是以前的文献只关注增长。其目的是调查一些社会如何以及为什么对经济萎缩更有弹性。该研究是一项定量研究,作者建立了一个纵向数据集,包括23个发展中国家,历时42年,以检验论文的目的。本研究使用国家和时期固定效应规范以及横断面图形表示来调查经济包容性代理指标与收缩事件频率之间的关系。研究结果表明,虽然包容性社会更能适应整体萎缩,但与经济萎缩频率相关的似乎是贫困水平的变化,而不是收入不平等的变化。不平等虽然仍然是解释国家增长潜力的一个重要因素,但似乎并没有使样本更能适应萎缩。作者得出结论,贫困和不平等与追赶过程相关的机制必须通过不同的渠道运行。最终,解释增长的过程可能会交叉,但并不总是与解释收缩弹性的过程重叠。在长期发展中,包容性增长的必要性已被倡导了几十年,但包容性却很少从萎缩的角度进行探讨。虽然减少贫困已经是一个重要的主流政治目标,但本文的区别在于提供了另一种观点来说明为什么这很重要。收入不平等可能会更多地限制经济增长,而减少贫困可能需要建立抵御经济萎缩的能力。为了赶上高收入经济体,发展中国家既需要增长,也需要抵御萎缩的能力,而政策制定者可能需要谨慎地平衡这两者。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
International Journal of Development Issues
International Journal of Development Issues Social Sciences-Political Science and International Relations
CiteScore
2.90
自引率
0.00%
发文量
20
期刊介绍: The International Journal of Development Issues (IJDI) publishes scholarly research on important development issues, with a particular focus on development dynamism and a leaning towards inter-disciplinary research. IJDI welcomes papers that are empirically oriented but such work should have solid methodological foundations based on realism and pragmatism rather than on idealism. Critical analysis of development issues from both the heteredox viewpoint and the neo-liberalist viewpoint, in orthodox tradition, are equally encouraged. The journal publishes authoritative, intelligent articles and research of direct relevance to those investigating and/or working within areas closely associated with development processes. Special consideration is given to research papers that consider development issues from either a socio-economic, political, historical or sociological, anthropological, ecological and technological standpoint.
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