Item type | Current library | Home library | Call number | Status | Barcode | |
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Main Campus Library | University of Eastern Africa, Baraton | Spc HG 3881.5 .W57 no. 3559 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 57446 |
Also available online.
"It is acknowledged that the lack of any systematic link between growth and income inequality does not necessarily mean that economic growth is not accompanied by major changes in the underlying income distribution. The author uses a method devised to decompose the redistributive effect of a tax to analyze the extent to which vertical redistribution associated with changing incomes over time is offset or reinforced by horizontal redistribution and re-ranking. He uses panel data from China and Vietnam over a period when both countries grew spectacularly as they transitioned from planned to market economies, and yet experienced smaller annual percentage increases in income inequality. The results suggest that substantial amounts of horizontal redistribution and re-ranking in both China-and to a lesser extent Vietnam-more than offset prop-poor vertical redistribution. Without the hori
Includes bibliographical references.
Open access.
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