
Inequality in post-structural reform Peru: the role of market forces and public policy
Declining inequality in Latin America. A decade of progress?
Year | : | 2010 |
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Author/s | : | Miguel Jaramillo |
Area/s | : | Poverty and equality |
Jaramillo, M., & Saavedra, J. (2010). Inequality in post-structural reform Peru: the role of market forces and public policy. En L. Lopez-Calva y N. Lustig (Eds.), Declining inequality in Latin America. A decade of progress? Washington, DC: Brookings Institution Press.
Latin America is often singled out for its high and persistent income inequality. Toward the end of the 1990s, however, income concentration began to fall across the region. Of the seventeen countries for which comparable data are available, twelve have experienced a decline, particularly since 2000. This book is among the first efforts to understand what happened in these countries and why.
Led by editors Felipe López-Calva and Nora Lustig, a panel of distinguished economists undertakes in-depth analyses of Argentina, Brazil, Mexico, and Peru. In addition, they provide essential background in the form of overviews of the relationship between markets and inequality, the political economy of redistribution, and the evolution of income inequality in the advanced industrialized economies. Two factors account for much of the decline in inequality: a decrease in the wage gap between skilled and low-skilled labor, and an increase in government transfers targeted to the poor.