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The importance of economic growth for poverty reduction is widely acknowledged. But there is an ongoing debate about the way inequality affects poverty reduction. For example, how does income distribution impact on the responsiveness of poverty to economic growth and changes to inequality? Research from Utrecht University, in the Netherlands, and University of East Anglia, in the UK, explores the relationship between poverty, inequality and growth in poor countries. It looks at how the rate of poverty reduction for any given rate of growth – or change to inequality – is affected by income distribution. The researchers examine data from 1980 to 1998 for the six main developing regions: East Asia, Eastern Europe and Central Asia, Latin America, Middle East and North Africa, South Asia and Sub-Saharan Africa. These regions showed very different trends in economic growth, poverty and inequality during the 1980s and 1990s. Recent influential studies have promoted the idea that economic growth can deliver poverty reduction. The evidence put forward is that during periods of growth, the incomes of poor people tend to rise at the same rate as those of the rest of society. The researchers acknowledge the importance of growth for poverty reduction, but argue that growth alone is not enough: the way income is distributed among the population is also important. It is harder for more unequal societies to convert growth into poverty reduction. And increases in inequality can push people into poverty, as the research shows has been the case in Eastern Europe and Central Asia. The researchers identify four factors that can influence poverty levels: changes to the average level of national income (economic growth or contraction); changes to income inequality; and how much poverty can be expected to respond to changes to income or changes to inequality (the income elasticity, and inequality elasticity, of poverty respectively). Key findings of the research include:
Differing growth rates are the main reason for the different rates of poverty reduction observed in the various regions. But changes to inequality, and income elasticity and inequality elasticity were also important. In Eastern Europe and Central Asia their combined effect was much larger than the impact of growth alone. The researchers conclude that:
Source(s): id21 Research Highlight: 2 October 2007
Further Information: Tel:
+44 (0) 1603 592806
Adriaan Kalwij Tel:
+31 30 253 7936 Utrecht University, The Netherlands
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