The
paper reviews the trends in domestic (or
within-country) income inequality over
the over the last two decades of contemporary
globalisation placing them in a comparitive
historical perspective with changes in
income distribution during the globalisation
wave of 1870-1914 so as to emphasise similarities
and differences between these two periods.
The paper then shows that the conclusions
of the standard theory and existing empirical
literature about inequality changes are
often in contradiction with a substantial
body of evidence indicating that the past
trends towards falling domestic inequality
were reversed since the early 1980s in
the majority of the developed, developing
and transitional economies. Finally, the
paper explores the causes of these changes
and of the discrepancy between theoretical
predictions and observed trends, by emphasising
in particular the distributive impact
of liberalisation and globalisation under
conditions of poorly sequenced macro policies,
incomplete markets, weak institutions,
asymmetric information, widespread protectionism
and structural rigidities.
October 29, 2006.
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