The Rise and Decline of Inequality in Mexico By Raymundo Campos, Gerardo Esquivel and Nora Lustig Presented by Nora Lustig The New Policy Model, Poverty.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Growth: The Long-Term Economic Failure in Developing Countries
Advertisements

Chinas Economic Prospects: 2006 – 2020 Li Shantong.
The future of export led growth Eduardo Zepeda Carnegie Endowment for International Peace United nations Development Programme 29 June 2009.
Prospects and Reform After the Great Recession Zeljko Bogetic Lead Economist and Coordinator for Economic Policy for Russia Presentation based on the Russian.
Macroeconomic regime, trade openness, unemployment and inequality. The Argentine Experience. Roxana Maurizio Universidad Nacional de General Sarmiento.
The Role of Employment for Growth and Poverty Reduction PREM learning week 2007 Catalina Gutierrez Pieter Serneels.
Trade and Inequality Nina Pavcnik Dartmouth College BREAD, CEPR, and NBER WTO-ILO Conference Research on Global Trade and Employment.
IFS Understanding recent trends in income inequality Alissa Goodman Institute for Fiscal Studies.
IFS Understanding recent trends in income inequality Alissa Goodman Institute for Fiscal Studies.
IFS Poverty and Inequality Luke Sibieta. © Institute for Fiscal Studies, 2005 Whats coming up Why do we care about poverty and inequality? How do we measure.
LABOR ECONOMICS Lecture 5: Earnings Inequality–Facts and Explanations Prof. Saul Hoffman Université de Paris 1 Panthéon-Sorbonne March, 2013.
Skill formation and exports: are we generating the required qualifications for development? Rossana Patrón María Inés Terra University of Uruguay Paper.
DOES ECONOMIC GROWTH ALWAYS REDUCE POVERTY? MARC WUYTS INSTITUTE OF SOCIAL STUDIES ERASMUS UNIVERSITY OF ROTTERDAM.
Population and Poverty
Technical High School and Vocational Training in Latin America. Marina Bassi and Hugo Ñopo.
SHORT-RUN ECONOMIC FLUCTUATIONS
Written by: Brahim Boudarbat, Thomas Lemieux, and Craig Riddell Analyzed by: Mico Radulovic, Ben May, Dajana Sormaz, Bryan Taylor, and Arjun Arulambala.
Globalization and Wage Inequality Trade, Outsourcing and Immigration.
Chapter 5 Urban Growth. Purpose This chapter explores the determinants of growth in urban income and employment.
Conference on Irish Economic Policy Union membership and the union wage Premium in Ireland Frank Walsh School of Economics University College Dublin
Chapter 16 Winning and Losing: Where You Live Really Matters.
The Polish economy in 2002 Frigyes Ferdinand Heinz Research Office (London) Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi Ltd.
Appendix Ghana. Conclusion per capita growth is accompanied by an increase in output per worker in the primary and tertiary sectors a decrease in output.
Public policy and European society University of Castellanza Session 3(a) Inequality in Europe and the USA March
Rethinking Alternative Growth Paradigms  Mah-Hui LIM  South Centre Conference on The South in the Global Economic Crisis, Geneva  January 31,
Lecture 10 World Income Inequality: past, present and future. Read Outline to Chapter 11.
Lessons from NAFTA William Maloney, Luis Serven World Bank Canadian Standing Senate Committee on Foreign Affairs
Declining Inequality in Latin America: Labor Markets & Redistributive Policies Nora Lustig Tulane University New Challenges for Growth and Productivity.
Lecture 12 World Income Inequality: past, present and future.
Minimum wage compliance in Latin America The weight of economic and institutional factors Andrés Marinakis ILO – Santiago
Is there progress in solving the burden of inequality? Nora Lustig Tulane University Latin America: Taking Off or Still Falling Behind? Yale Center for.
Inequality and Poverty in Mexico: Nora Lustig Samuel Z. Stone Professor of Latin American Economics Tulane University New Orleans, November 17,
Programme to Support Pro-Poor Policy Development A partnership between the Presidency, Republic of South Africa and the European Union Explaining Education.
Sectorial shifts and Inequality A way to relate macroeconomic events to inequality changes Carlos Villalobos Barría (University of Goettingen) Chair of.
Poverty and Inequality in Mexico after NAFTA Gerardo Esquivel El Colegio de México.
Copyright © 2008 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. Chapter 14 Labor Markets.
Labour Market Inequality in India and Brazil: Comparing Labour Market Institutions in India and Brazil Taniya Chakrabarty 18th December 2014.
1 Earnings Inequality in South Africa since the End of Apartheid Phillippe G. Leite Terry Mckinley Rafael G. Os ó rio IPC-Bras í lia July 17 th, 2006.
China Development Research Foundation Beijing, July 2,
Pro Poor Growth Manmohan Agarwal Centre for International Governance Innovation* * This research is part of a research project supported by the ORF.
Chapter 4 Inequality. Why Does It Matter? We Are the 99 Percent We are the 99 percent. We are getting kicked out of our homes. We are forced to choose.
Thoughts on skills shortages In Transition: Recognizing Economic Turning Points 52 nd Annual Conference Council for Community and Economic Research Oklahoma.
1 The global distribution of income: past trends and future prospects A B Atkinson, University of Oxford Inequality and poverty in the global economy,
Rwanda A Country in Economic Transition (with emphasis on 2000 to 2006) March 16, 2008 World Bank/CSAE Workshop Shared Growth and Job Creation in Africa:
Institutional Determinants of Labor Reallocation in Transition T. Boeri & K. Terrell Presented by Carlo Alberto Miani LM SID /04/2015.
Comments on Manufacturing Sector and Poverty Narayan Manandhar 11 November, 2005.
Historical Trends in Racial Inequality. Racial Inequality.
First meeting of the IDB Euro Latin Research Network Some Research Questions : Poverty and Labor Markets in Latin America Jaime Saavedra (GRADE)
NS4540 Winter Term 2016 Latin America: Employment 2016.
Latin America in a New Global Economic Order CAF and University of Oxford February 17,
1 Net Worth over $2.3 billion Copyright ACDC Leadership 2015.
1 Rising Inequality and Polarization in Asia Trends, Causes and Potential Responses Wanda Tseng Deputy Director, Asia and Pacific Department International.
 What is the difference between wealth & Income?  How do you measure wealth?  What are assets & debts?  What does it mean to be wealthy but little.
The Economic Costs of Educational Inequality in Developing Countries Wael Moussa, Ph.D. Carina Omoeva, Ph.D. Charles Gale March 2016 FHI 360 Education.
International Development Economics Associates (IDEAs) I NTERNATIONAL C ONFERENCE ON F INANCIAL I NSTABILITY AND I NEQUALITY IN AN E CONOMICALLY I NTEGRATED.
14 October 2016 Christian Daude
Public policy and European society University of Castellanza
Employment and Earnings in Rural India:
International Economics By Robert J. Carbaugh 9th Edition
Ageing Poorly? Accounting for the Decline in Earnings Inequality in Brazil, Francisco Ferreira, PhD1; Sergio Firpo, PhD2; Julián Messina, PhD3.
NS4540 Winter Term 2017 Latin America: Income Distribution
Alberto Valdés Taking Action for the World’s Poor and Hungry People
Measures of Inequality and Their Applications in Indonesia
International Trade and Economic Growth
Institutional change on social inequality
Income Inequality and Poverty
NS4540 Winter Term 2016 Chile Economy
NS4540 Winter Term 2019 Latin America: Income Distribution
IN WAGES AND LEADERSHIP
Changes in Income Inequality in Lithuania: The Role of Policy, Labour Market Structure, Returns and Demographics Comments by Anna Lukyanova IARIW-HSE.
Presentation transcript:

The Rise and Decline of Inequality in Mexico By Raymundo Campos, Gerardo Esquivel and Nora Lustig Presented by Nora Lustig The New Policy Model, Poverty and Inequality in Latin America WIDER, Buenos Aires, September 1-3, 2011

Outline Evolution of (disposable household per capita) income inequality Macroeconomic variables and inequality trends Proximate causes of inequality trends: labor income, non-labor income and transfers Proximate causes of labor income inequality trends: institutional factors, workers characteristics and returns to those characteristics Summing up

Evolution of Inequality The evolution of inequality in Mexico followed two distinct trends. It rose during the 1980s and declined between 1996 and The first period coincided with the debt crisis and structural adjustment initiatives: fiscal austerity, devaluation and financial and trade liberalization. The second period coincided with the implementation of NAFTA in 1994 as well as with social policy reforms that emphasized access to basic education and introduced large-scale targeted anti-poverty programs.

Inequality (Gini) and Poverty (Headcount):

Gini Coefficient: Structural Reforms Continue 1994: Implementation of NAFTA

Macroeconomic variables and inequality trends A cursory examination of the evolution of inequality and macroeconomic variables does not seem to find an obvious correlation between the two. Inequality increased and declined during periods of slow-growth, crises and recovery, depending on the period.

Macroeconomic variables and inequality trends For example, inequality increased when average growth was negative in the 1980s, increased during the speedy recovery of and declined during the period of anemic growth Likewise, inequality both increased and declined when the peso was appreciating or depreciating. Hence, the explanation must be found elsewhere.

Causes of Rising Inequality: Based on available evidence, the increase in inequality in the 1980s and early 1990s appears to be associated to the unequalizing effect of an increase in the premium to skills and falling minimum wages. In turn, the increase in the premium to skills might have been a consequence of trade liberalization and other factors which shifted the relative labor demand towards workers with higher skills (especially, with tertiary education).

Causes of Declining Inequality: Lerman and Yitzhaki (1985) static decomposition reveals that labor income, remittances and government transfers were equalizing after 1994 and until In 2010, however, labor income became unequalizing while the other two continued to be equalizing.

Inequality in labor earnings and hourly wages Given the importance of labor market inequality dynamics in explaining the trend in overall inequality, this paper examined the role of: – institutional factors: minimum wages and unionization rate) and – market factors: relative demand and supply of labor by skill

Inequality in labor earnings and hourly wages Labor income inequality increased for the period and declined for the period that is, the post-NAFTA period– In turn, this decline had two distinct patterns: – The period shows a marked decline in inequality in the distribution of hourly wages, and – the period shows that inequality remained fairly constant.

Relative returns and relative supply of workers with high school education or more against workers with secondary or less The increase in relative supply for the period is approximately 30 percent while for the period is approximately 50 percent. Inequality measured as the relative returns of high-school educated workers, on the other hand, increases for the period and declines for the period

Relative Supply Increased By 30% Relative Supply Increased By 50%

Supply, Demand or Institutional Factors? Following Bound and Johnson (1992), if increases in supply are larger (smaller) than increases in demand then we expect a fall (rise) in the relative returns. For the period we observe both an increase in relative supply and relative returns for workers with tertiary education. Hence, demand and institutional factors must be responsible for the increase in relative returns during this period. SKBTC and declining minimum wages have been found to be determining factors.

Relative Dem Outpaced Rel. Supply: SBTC and Declining Minimum Wages

Supply, Demand or Institutional Factors? For the period , institutional factors are relatively unimportant given that they remained practically constant throughout the period. This suggests that only supply and demand factors are at play. Given that relative supply increased and relative returns declined, it must be the case that growth in the relative supply outpaced growth in the relative demand. Petering out of unequalizing effects of market- oriented reforms?

Relative Supply Outpaced Rel. Demand Causes?

Characteristics Vs. Returns: Decomposition of Differences in the Distribution of Earnings: 1996 and 2010 Recentered Influence Function (RIF) procedures (Firpo, Fortin and Lemieux, 2009) Extension of Oaxaca-Blinder parametric decomposition; advantage: non-path dependence

Characteristics Vs. Returns: :

Changes in the distribution of characteristics (education and experience) were unequalizing If only characteristics would have changed, earnings inequality would have been higher – Paradox of progress is still present because the characteristics became more equally distributed, especially education Changes in the distribution of returns (to education and experience) were equalizing If only returns would have changed, earnings inequality would have been yet lower

Have declining relative returns reached a turning point? Returns of workers with at least high school relative to the rest of workers declined for the period , and for the period returns are mostly constant. Relative returns of workers with college education slightly increased for the period For the period, it is possible that relative demand for high skilled workers started to rise again.

Summing-up Decline in inequality in Mexico has occurred in spite of its lackluster growth. Furthermore, the decline in inequality defies some of the worst omens voiced by NAFTA critiques more than a decade ago. The fear that further market liberalization, especially in agriculture, would result in lower earnings for the low-skilled as large numbers of peasants and workers in relatively weak domestic industries would be displaced by imports from the US did not really materialize.

Summing-up There are apparently two main factors that explain the inequality decline between 1996 and First, the skill premium (relative returns to post-secondary education) has declined and, Second, government transfers have become more generous and progressive (that is, targeted to the poorest). PENDING

Summing-up For the period it appears that relative demand for high skilled workers started to increase again (returns to schooling follow a convex function in 2010). This may explain why labor earnings became unequalizing in 2010 for the first time since NAFTA had been implemented. However, since this conclusion is based on one observation (2010), such a conclusion should be considered tentative. It may or may not signal a new unequalizing trend in labor market dynamics.