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Nora Lustig Samuel Z. Stone Professor of Latin American Economics Dept. of Economics, Tulane University Nonresident Fellow, Center for Global Development.

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Presentation on theme: "Nora Lustig Samuel Z. Stone Professor of Latin American Economics Dept. of Economics, Tulane University Nonresident Fellow, Center for Global Development."— Presentation transcript:

1 Nora Lustig Samuel Z. Stone Professor of Latin American Economics Dept. of Economics, Tulane University Nonresident Fellow, Center for Global Development and Inter-American Dialogue Washington, DC, February 28, 2011 1

2  Investing in early childhood  Improving school quality  Addressing youth at risk  Improving labor markets and extending coverage of social security  Addressing the double burden of the health transition  Improving CCTs and other anti-poverty programs  Fostering social inclusion

3 In addition to the inequality and poverty trends, education gaps, youth at risk, health burdens:  Growth and growth prospects for the region; heterogeneity (commodity importers vs. commodity exporters)  Demographic transition  Fiscal space  Challenges: rising food prices, climate change (systemic adverse shocks), water scarcity

4  Lending program  Non-lending activities  Knowledge and information: creation and sharing  What about:  Advisory services and technical assistance: what role will they play?  Raising public awareness: should it be part of the strategy?  Providing support to local agents of change: should it be part of the strategy?

5 1. Declining inequality: sustaining the momentum 2. The challenge of rising food prices 3. Assessing fiscal policy’s contribution to equity goals 4. Improving quality and accessibility of data 5. Promote accountability and transparency

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9  Labor market dynamics (Goldin and Katz, 2008; Schady et al., 2010)  Relationship between growth patterns and declining inequality  Why is inequality rising in some countries?  Indirect impact of CCTs on local economies  Assessing the contribution of fiscal policy to poverty and inequality reduction

10  Improving access to post basic secondary education; supply/demand side interventions?  Safety net design: counter-cyclical and responsive to shocks. In particular, what to do with rising food prices?  Increase progressivity of tax-and-transfer system

11  Household surveys are still deficient: urban areas only, not comparable over time, not comparable across countries, egregious misreporting, do not include information on taxes and transfers  => back to “old” MECOVI  IDB’s online databank of household surveys  IDB’s online data on poverty and inequality (join forces with SEDLAC/WB?)

12  Best practices in accessibility to information (e.g., household surveys and tax return data by OECD countries)  Best practices in institutionalizing objective poverty and inequality measuring and evaluation of social policy and programs (e.g., CONEVAL? )

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