Household Income Dynamics in Rural China

Theoretical work has shown that nonlinear dynamics in household incomes can yield poverty traps and distribution-dependent growth. If this is true, the potential implications for policy are dramatic: effective social protection from transient poverty would be an investment with lasting benefits, and pro-poor redistribution would promote aggregate economic growth. The authors test for nonlinearity in the dynamics of household incomes and expenditures using panel data for 6,000 households over six years in rural southwest China. While they find evidence of nonlinearity in the income and expenditure dynamics, there is no sign of a dynamic poverty trap. The authors argue that existing private and social arrangements in this setting protect vulnerable households from the risk of destitution. However, their findings imply that the speed of recovery from an income shock is appreciably slower for the poor than for others. They also find that current inequality reduces future growth in mean incomes, though the "growth cost" of inequality appears to be small. The maximum contribution of inequality is estimated to be 4-7 percent of mean income and 2 percent of mean consumption.

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Jalan, Jyotsna, Ravallion, Martin
Format: Policy Research Working Paper biblioteca
Language:English
en_US
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2001-11
Subjects:ADJUSTMENT PROCESS, ADVERSE IMPACT, AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTION, AGRICULTURE, AUTOREGRESSION, BUSINESS CYCLE, CAPITAL ACCUMULATION, CHRONIC POVERTY, CHRONICALLY POOR, COMPARATIVE ECONOMICS, CONSUMPTION GROWTH, CONSUMPTION INSURANCE, CONSUMPTION SMOOTHING, COUNTRY REGRESSIONS, CREDIT MARKET, DATA MODEL, DATA SET, DEPENDENT VARIABLE, DEVELOPMENT ECONOMICS, DYNAMIC PANEL, ECONOMETRIC MODEL, ECONOMETRICS, ECONOMIC DYNAMICS, ECONOMIC GROWTH, ECONOMIC RESEARCH, ECONOMIC REVIEW, ECONOMIC STUDIES, ECONOMIC THEORY, ECONOMICS RESEARCH, EMPIRICAL WORK, EMPLOYMENT, EQUILIBRIUM, EXPENDITURES, FAMINE, FINANCIAL CRISES, FINANCIAL DEVELOPMENT, FINANCIAL POLICIES, FORESTRY, GROWTH MODELS, GROWTH RATE, GROWTH THEORIES, HOUSEHOLD INCOME, HOUSEHOLD INCOMES, HOUSEHOLD SURVEYS, INCOME, INCOME GROUPS, INCOME INEQUALITY, INCOME REDISTRIBUTION, INCOME RISK, INCOME SHOCKS, INCOMES, INCREASING FUNCTION, INDEPENDENT MEASUREMENT, INDEPENDENT MEASUREMENT ERROR, INFLATION, INFORMAL INSURANCE, INSURANCE, LABOR PRODUCTIVITY, LAGGED DEPENDENT, LAND USE, LDCS, LINEAR MODEL, LIQUIDITY, LIVING STANDARDS, LONG-RUN EQUILIBRIA, LONG-RUN EQUILIBRIUM, LOW INCOMES, MACROECONOMICS, MARKET ECONOMIES, MARKET FAILURES, MEAN CONSUMPTION, MEAN INCOME, MEAN INCOMES, MEASUREMENT ERROR, MONETARY POLICY, MONOPOLIES, MULTIPLE EQUILIBRIA, NEGATIVE SHOCK, PERMANENT INCOME, POLICY RESEARCH, POLICY STRATEGIES, POOR, POVERTY GAP, POVERTY LINE, PRODUCTIVITY, PUBLIC ECONOMICS, RAPID GROWTH, RECIPROCITY, REDISTRIBUTIVE POLICIES, REPEATED SHOCKS, SERIAL CORRELATION, SERIAL DEPENDENCE, SERIES OBSERVATIONS, SURPLUS LABOR, TARGETING, TELECOMMUNICATIONS, THEORETICAL MODELS, TIME SERIES, TRANSFER PAYMENTS, TRANSITION ECONOMIES, UNEMPLOYMENT, WAR, WEALTH HOUSEHOLD INCOME, SOCIAL PROTECTION SYSTEMS, REDISTRIBUTION, INCOME GROWTH, HOUSEHOLD CONSUMPTION, WEALTH,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2001/11/1631785/household-income-dynamics-rural-china
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/19436
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!