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There is a clear trend in rich countries that, despite rising
incomes and living standards, the gap between rich and poor is
widening. What does this mean for our health? Does increasing
income inequality affect outcomes such as obesity, life expectancy
and subjective well-being? Are rich and poor groups affected in the
same ways? This book reviews the latest research on the
relationship between inequality and health, and provides a
pedagogical introduction to the tools and knowledge needed to
understand and assess the vast literature on the subject. The book
includes discussion of the definitions and measurement of objective
and subjective health and income inequality, and illustrates how
various measures have been developed in different countries. Main
conclusions from the literature are then summarized and discussed
critically. It incorporates a substantial research overview of the
field, as well as a detailed debate of the empirical challenges
that arise during research. The book concludes that results are
surprisingly contradictory, but that several studies have found
that higher inequality is directly linked to lower subjective
well-being. Students and scholars in public health, social work,
economics, and sociology will find this book an essential
exposition of conceptual issues and empirical methods applied to
the controversial topic of the health consequences of inequality.
There is a clear trend in rich countries that, despite rising
incomes and living standards, the gap between rich and poor is
widening. What does this mean for our health? Does increasing
income inequality affect outcomes such as obesity, life expectancy
and subjective well-being? Are rich and poor groups affected in the
same ways? This book reviews the latest research on the
relationship between inequality and health, and provides a
pedagogical introduction to the tools and knowledge needed to
understand and assess the vast literature on the subject. The book
includes discussion of the definitions and measurement of objective
and subjective health and income inequality, and illustrates how
various measures have been developed in different countries. Main
conclusions from the literature are then summarized and discussed
critically. It incorporates a substantial research overview of the
field, as well as a detailed debate of the empirical challenges
that arise during research. The book concludes that results are
surprisingly contradictory, but that several studies have found
that higher inequality is directly linked to lower subjective
well-being. Students and scholars in public health, social work,
economics, and sociology will find this book an essential
exposition of conceptual issues and empirical methods applied to
the controversial topic of the health consequences of inequality.
Written in celebration of its 350th anniversary in 2018, this book
details the history of the central bank of Sweden, Sveriges
Riksbank, as presented by Klas Fregert. It relates the bank's
history to the development of other major central banks around the
world. Chapters are written by some of the more prominent scholars
in the field of monetary economics and economic history. These
chapters include an analysis of the Bank of England written by
Charles Goodhart; the evolution of banking in America, written by
Barry Eichengreen; a first account of the People's Bank of China,
written by Franklin Allen, Xian Gu, and Jun Qian; as well as a
chapter about the brief but important history of the European
Central Bank, written by Otmar Issing.
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