Overcoming Inequality in Latin America

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account
Adverse Income Distribution Consequence
Average Gini Coefficient1
capital
Capital Account Liberalisation
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Category=KCM
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Convertibility Regime
countries
development
development economics
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eq_business-finance-law
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eq_isMigrated=2
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goals
IMF Board
IMF Lending
IMF Package
IMF Resource
Inequality Reduction
International Monetary Fund
Lac
liberalization
Lowering Tariff Protection
macroeconomic policy analysis
MDB Lending
Median Voter
Median Voter Position
millennium
multidimensional inequality assessment
Non-linearity Hypothesis
Pe Rc
policy
political economy research
Post-reform Context
poverty reduction strategies
Private Capital Flows
Private Flows
Real Exchange Rate
reforms
Resource Rents
Skilled Wages
social stratification
trade
Trade Control Measures
trade liberalisation effects
Trade Policy Reforms

Product details

  • ISBN 9780415650601
  • Weight: 380g
  • Dimensions: 138 x 216mm
  • Publication Date: 22 Oct 2012
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Latin America is faced with the challenge of achieving the Millennium Developmental Goal to halve poverty in the region by 2015. Historically, this region has experienced persistently high levels of inequality and poverty, the causes and consequences of which are analytically examined here.

Adopting a multidimensional approach, this informative book focuses on the mechanisms that lead to higher inequality and emphasizes the role of macroeconomics, trade rules, capital flows and the political electoral process. It analyzes how inequality has hindered development, how it interacts with a nation’s economic, social and political processes, and how inequality constrains these processes in ways that weakens the prospect of establishing and sustaining a dynamic, wealthy and creative society.

An international team of specialist contributors investigate and explain these crucial issues. Examining the key economic policies and reforms which have exacerbated the region’s extremely high inequality levels, throughout this book they prescribe an alternative range of policy suggestions to help alleviate inequality and provide the foundations for more equitable development.

Ricardo Gottschalk is a Research Fellow at the Institute of Development Studies at the University of Sussex. Patricia Justino is a British Academy Research Fellow at the Poverty Research Unit and the department of Economics at the University of Sussex.