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Since the late 1980s, almost all Latin American countries have
undergone a series of far-reaching economic reforms, particularly
in the areas of financial and capital account liberalization and
trade. This book provides a comparative and analytical framework
for assessing the impact of these reforms upon 16 countries in
Latin America and the Caribbean, including: Argentina, Brazil,
Chile, Colombia, Ecuador, El Salvador, Mexico, and Peru.The
contributors analyse the complex interaction between macro
policies, trade and financial liberalization. They illustrate that
capital account liberalization in many cases has counteracted
objectives of trade liberalization by provoking real exchange-rate
appreciation and a profit squeeze in tradable goods sectors. The
book concludes that structural shifts resulting from the reform
process - such as greater demand for skilled labour and
labour-saving investments in modern economic sectors - are major
underlying causes of inequality and poverty. The authors ascertain
that although these repercussions are strongly associated with the
process of trade liberalization, in several instances the positive
impact of macroeconomic stabilization and expansion of aggregate
demand on employment and real incomes have counteracted these
negative outcomes. Economic Liberalization, Distribution and
Poverty will be of interest to scholars of economic development,
policymakers in countries undergoing major economic reforms (Latin
America, Africa, Asia and Eastern Europe), economic analysts at
multilateral agencies (UN, IMF, World Bank, regional development
banks, BIS), and international investment agencies including major
banks. The book will also be important to aid agencies and those
interested in a better understanding of the impact of globalization
on the well-being of people across the globe.
Inequality and Economic Development in Brazil is part of the World
Bank Country Study series. These reports are published with the
approval of the subject government to communicate the results of
the Bank's work on the economic and related conditions of member
countries to governments and to the development community.
Excessive income inequality is unfair and undesirable on ethical
grounds and can bring adverse effects on economic growth, health
outcomes, social cohesion, and crime. Excessively unequal initial
conditions are likely to lead to a perverse cycle of weak social
mobility. Such is the case in countries like Brazil, where
fertility differentials between educated and uneducated mothers are
much greater. Brazil's income inequality has been very high and
persistent over time, and has deep historic roots. Nonetheless,
there have been important income improvements for the poorest,
especially since stabilization in 1993. Brazil also has achieved
major improvements in social indicators in the last few decades.
This study addresses three questions: - Why do inequalities matter
for Brazil's development? - Why does Brazil occupy a position of
very high inequality in the international community? - What should
public policy do about it?
The Latin America and Caribbean (LAC) region is making progress in
opening the doors of development to all. But it still has a long
way to go. At the current pace, it would take, on average, a
generation for the region to achieve universal access to the basic
services that make for human opportunity. Intra-county regional
disparities are large, and barely converging. This book assesses
the status and evolution of human opportunity in LAC. It builds on
the 2008 publication, Measuring Inequality of Opportunity, in
several directions. First, it uses newly-available data to expand
the set of opportunities and personal circumstances under analysis.
The data is representative of some 200 million children living in
19 countries over the last 15 years. Second, it compares human
opportunity in LAC with that of developed countries, among them the
U.S. and France, two very different models of social policy. This
allows for illuminating exercises in benchmarking and
extrapolation. And third, it looks at human opportunity within
countries - across regions, states and cities. This gives us a
preliminary glimpse at the geographic dimension of equity, and at
the role that different federal structures play.
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