Dealing with Poverty and Income Distribution Issues in Developing Countries: Cross-regional Experiences
Dealing with Poverty and Income Distribution Issues in Developing Countries: Cross-regional Experiences
The paper deals with the major empirical poverty and income distribution issues in the context of developing countries. To focus attention it starts with a simple poverty decomposition framework where a change in poverty is shown to be the sum of a change due to economic growth and a change due to income distribution. It is shown that when the poverty line is a function of mean income, the elasticity of the poverty line with respect to income plays an important role in determining the size of the change due to growth. Using a recent set of data on income distribution for developing countries, the paper then looks at income inequality and poverty in three developing regions (Latin America, Asia and Sub-Saharan Africa). Empirical results on the Kuznets curve, initial inequality, and growth and adjustment and poverty are reported and policy implications are drawn.
CITATION: Ali, Ali Abdel Gadir. Dealing with Poverty and Income Distribution Issues in Developing Countries: Cross-regional Experiences . Oxford : Oxford University Press , 1998. Journal of African Economies Volume 7 Supp 2 December 1998 pp. 77-115 - Available at: https://library.au.int/dealing-poverty-and-income-distribution-issues-developing-countries-cross-regional-experiences