- Home
- For Good Measure (epub)
For Good Measure Page 13
For Good Measure Read online
Page 13
Bach, S., G. Corneo, and V. Steiner (2009), “From bottom to top: The entire income distribution in Germany, 1992–2003,” Review of Income and Wealth, Vol. 55(2), pp. 303–330.
Banerjee, A. and T. Piketty (2010), “Top Indian incomes, 1922–2000,” in Atkinson, A.B. and T. Piketty (eds.), Top Incomes: A Global Perspective, Oxford University Press, Oxford.
Barofsky, J. and S. Younger (2018), “Appendix 6F. Comparison of methods to value the distributional impact of health spending,” in Lustig, N. (ed.), Commitment to Equity Handbook: Estimating the Impact of Fiscal Policy on Inequality and Poverty, Brookings Institution Press and CEQ Institute, Tulane University, www.commitmentoequity.org.
Bastagli, F. (2015), “Bringing taxation into social protection analysis and planning,” ODI Working Paper, No. 421, Overseas Development Institute, London, www.odi.org/sites/odi.org.uk//odi-assets/publications-opinion-files/9700.pdf.
Beegle, K. et al. (2012), “Methods of household consumption measurement through surveys: Experimental results from Tanzania,” Journal of Development Economics, Vol 98(1), pp. 3–18.
Belfield, C. et al. (2015), Living Standards, Poverty and Inequality in the UK: 2015, Report no. R107, London, www.ifs.org.uk/publications/7878.
Benabou, R. (1996), “Inequality and growth,” NBER Macroeconomics Annual 1996, Vol. 11, MIT Press, Cambridge, MA.
Beneke, M., N. Lustig, and J.A. Oliva (2018), “The impact of taxes and social spending on inequality and poverty in El Salvador,” in Lustig, N. (ed.), Commitment to Equity Handbook: Estimating the Impact of Fiscal Policy on Inequality and Poverty, Brookings Institution and CEQ Institute, www.commitmentoequity.org/publications/handbook.php.
Biemer, P. and S. Christ (2008), “Weighting survey data,” in De Leeuw, E., J. Hox, and D. Dillman (eds.), International Handbook of Survey Methodology, Psychology Press, New York.
Blanchet, T., J. Fournier, and T. Piketty (2017), “Generalized Pareto curves: Theory and applications,” WID.world Working Paper, No. 2017/3.
Bleaney, M. and A. Nishiyama (2003), “Convergence in income inequality: Differences between advanced and developing countries,” Economics Bulletin, Vol. 4(22), pp. 1–10.
Bourguignon, F. (2017a), “Equivalence Between Adjusting Income Levels and Sample Weights in Correcting Income Distributions,” unpublished document, Paris School of Economics, June.
Bourguignon, F. (2017b), “Correcting Survey Data for Top Incomes,” PowerPoint presentation, Methodological Advances in Fiscal Incidence Analysis, Commitment to Equity Institute (Tulane University), Universidad de San Andrés, Buenos Aires, November 7–8.
Bourguignon, F. (2016), “Issues in the Measurement of Income Inequality,” keynote lecture at the conference on the Measurement of Income Distribution and Inequality, PUEDUNAM and INEGI, Mexico City, November 16.
Bourguignon, F. (2015a), The Globalization of Inequality, Princeton University Press, New Jersey.
Bourguignon, F. (2015b), “Appraising income inequality databases in Latin America,” in Ferreira, F.H.G. and N. Lustig (eds.), “Appraising cross-national income inequality databases,” special issue, Journal of Economic Inequality, Vol. 13(4), pp. 557–578.
Bourguignon, F. (2003), “The growth elasticity of poverty reduction: Explaining heterogeneity across countries and time periods” in Eicher, T. and S. Turnovsky (eds.), Inequality and Growth: Theory and Policy Implications, MIT Press, Cambridge, MA.
Bourguignon, F. and C. Morrisson (2002), “Inequality among world citizens: 1820–1992,” American Economic Review, Vol. 92(4), pp. 727–744.
Bourguignon, F., H.G. Ferreira, and N. Lustig (eds.) (2005), The Microeconomics of Income Distribution Dynamics in East Asia and Latin America, World Bank and Oxford University Press, Washington, DC.
Bucheli, M. et al. (2014), “Social spending, taxes and income redistribution in Uruguay,” in Lustig, N., C. Pessino, and J. Scott (eds.), “The redistributive impact of taxes and social spending in Latin America,” special issue, Public Finance Review, Vol. 42(3), pp. 413–433.
Burkhauser, R.V., S. Feng, and J. Larrimore (2010), “Improving imputations of top incomes in the public-use current population survey by using both cell-means and variances,” Economic Letters, Vol. 108(1), pp. 69–72.
Burkhauser, R.V., J. Larrimore, and S. Lyons (2016), “Measuring health insurance benefits: The case of people with disabilities,” Contemporary Economic Policy, Vol. 35(3), pp. 439–456.
Burkhauser, R.V. et al. (2012), “Recent trends in top income shares in the USA: Reconciling estimates from March CPS and IRS tax return data,” Review of Economics and Statistics, Vol. 94, pp. 371–88.
Cabrera, M., N. Lustig, and H.E. Moran (2015), “Fiscal policy, inequality, and the ethnic divide in Guatemala,” World Development, Vol. 76, pp. 263–279.
Campos-Vazquez, R. and N. Lustig (2017), “Labour income inequality in Mexico: Puzzles solved and unsolved,” UNU-WIDER Working Paper, No. 2017/186.
Capgemini and Merrill Lynch (2011), World Wealth Report, New York.
Chakravarty, S.R. (2009), Inequality, Polarization and Poverty: Advances in Distributional Analysis, Springer, New York.
Cornia, G.A. (ed.) (2014), Falling Inequality in Latin America: Policy Changes and Lessons, UNU-WIDER, Studies in Development Economics, Oxford University Press, Oxford.
Cowell, F.A. (2009), Measuring Inequality, London School of Economics Perspectives in Economic Analysis, Oxford University Press, Oxford.
Cowell, F.A. and E. Flachaire (2015), “Statistical methods for distributional analysis,” in Atkinson, A.B. and F. Bourguignon (eds.), Handbook of Income Distribution, Vol. 2, Elsevier, North-Holland, Amsterdam.
Cowell, F.A. and E. Flachaire (2007), “Income distribution and inequality measurement: The problem of extreme values,” Journal of Econometrics, Vol. 141(2), pp. 1044–1072.
Cowell, F.A. and Victoria-Feser, M.-P. (1996), “Robustness properties of inequality measures,” Econometrica, Vol. 64, pp. 77–101.
Dabla-Norris, E. et al. (2015), Causes and Consequences of Income Inequality: A Global Perspective, International Monetary Fund, Washington, DC, www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/sdn/2015/sdn1513.pdf.
Deaton, A. (2015), “On tyrannical experts and expert tyrants,” Review of Austrian Economics, Vol. 28(4), pp. 407–412.
Deaton, A. (2013), The Great Escape: Health, Wealth and the Origins of Inequality, Princeton University Press, Princeton.
Deaton, A. (2005), “Measuring poverty in a growing world (or Measuring growth in a poor world),” Review of Economics and Statistics, Vol. 87(1), pp. 1–19.
Deere, C.D., R. Kanbur, and F. Stewart (2018), “Horizontal inequalities,” in Stiglitz J.E., J.-P. Fitoussi, and M. Durand (eds.), For Good Measure: Advancing Research on Well-Being Metrics Beyond GDP, OECD Publishing, Paris.
DeNavas-Walt, C. and B.D. Proctor (2015), Income and Poverty in the United States: 2014, US Bureau of the Census, Washington, DC.
Department for Work and Pensions (2015), Households Below Average Income: An Analysis of the Income Distribution 1994/95–2013/14, London.
Diaz-Bazan, T. (2015), “Measuring inequality from top to bottom,” World Bank Policy Research Paper, No. 7237, World Bank, Washington, DC.
Duclos, J. and A. Araar (2006), Poverty and Equity: Measurement, Policy and Estimation with DAD, International Development Research Centre, Springer, New York.
Ebel, R.D. and J.E. Petersen (eds.) (2012), Oxford Handbook of State and Local Government Finance, Oxford University Press, Oxford.
Esteban, J. and D. Ray (2006), “Inequality, lobbying and resource allocation,” American Economic Review, Vol. 96(1), pp. 257–279.
EUROMOD, “Statistics on the Distribution and Decomposition of Disposable Income,” www.iser.essex.ac.uk/euromod/statistics/.
Ferreira F.H.G. et al. (2016), “A global count of the extreme poor in 2012: Data issues, methodology and initial results,” Journal of Economic Inequality, Vol. 14(2), pp. 141–172.
Ferreira, F.H.G. et al. (2012
), “Economic mobility and the rise of the Latin American middle class,” Latin America and Caribbean Studies, World Bank, Washington, DC.
Ferreira, F.H.G. and N. Lustig (2015), “Appraising cross-national income inequality databases,” special issue, Journal of Economic Inequality, Vol. 13(4).
Ferreira, F.H.G., N. Lustig, and D. Teles (2015), “Appraising cross-national income inequality databases: An introduction,” in Ferreira, F.H.G. and N. Lustig, “Appraising cross-national income inequality databases,” special issue, Journal of Economic Inequality, Vol. 13(4), pp. 497–526.
Fesseau, M. and M. Mattonetti (2013), “Distributional measures across household groups in a national accounts framework: Results from an experimental cross-country exercise on household income, consumption and saving,” OECD Statistics Working Papers, No. 2013/04, OECD Publishing, Paris, http://dx.doi.org/10.1787/k3wdjqr775f-en.
Fisher, J. et al. (2016), “Inequality in 3D: Income, consumption and wealth,” Working Paper Series, No. 2016-09, Washington Center for Equitable Growth, Washington, DC, http://cdn.equitablegrowth.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/12/21123945/122117-WP-Inequality-in-3D.pdf.
Fishlow, A. (1973), “Some reflections on post-1964 Brazilian economic policy,” in Stepan, A. (ed.), Authoritarian Brazil, Yale University Press, New Haven.
Garbinti, B., J. Goupille-Lebret, and T. Piketty (2017), “Income inequality in France, 1900–2014: Evidence from Distributional National Accounts (DINA),” WID.world Working Paper, No. 2017/4.
Gasparini, L. and L. Tornarolli (2015), “A review of the OECD income distribution database,” in Ferreira, F.H.G. and N. Lustig, “Appraising cross-national income inequality databases,” special issue, Journal of Economic Inequality, Vol. 13(4), pp. 479–602.
Groves, R.M. et al. (2009), Survey Methodology, John Wiley & Sons, Hoboken, New Jersey.
Gurría, A. (2011), “Tackling inequality,” OECD Observer, http://oecdobserver.org/news/fullstory.php//3717/Tackling_inequality.html.
Higgins, S. and C. Pereira (2014), “The effects of Brazil’s high taxation and social spending on the distribution of household income,” in Lustig, N., C. Pessino, and J. Scott (eds.), “The redistributive impact of taxes and social spending in Latin America,” special issue, Public Finance Review, Vol. 42(3), pp. 346–367.
Higgins, S. and N. Lustig (2018), “Allocating taxes and transfers, constructing income concepts, and completing sections A, B, and C of CEQ master workbook,” in Lustig, N. (ed.), Commitment to Equity Handbook: Estimating the Impact of Fiscal Policy on Inequality and Poverty, Brookings Institution Press and CEQ Institute, Washington, DC, and Tulane University, advance online version available at www.commitmentoequity.org/publications/handbook.php.
Higgins, S. and N. Lustig (2016), “Can a poverty-reducing and progressive tax and transfer system hurt the poor?,” Journal of Development Economics, Vol. 122, pp. 63–75.
Higgins, S., N. Lustig, and A. Vigorito (2017), “Top incomes, issues with survey data, and inequality: Evidence from simulations and linked income and tax return data,” Power-Point presentation, LACEA Annual Meeting, Buenos Aires, November 9.
Hill, R. et al. (2017), “A fiscal incidence analysis for Ethiopia,” in Inchauste, G. and N. Lustig (eds.), The Distributional Impact of Taxes and Transfers: Evidence from Eight Low- and Middle-Income Countries, World Bank, Washington, DC.
Hlasny, V. and P. Verme (2017), “The impact of top incomes biases on the measurement of inequality in the United States,” ECINEQ Working Paper, No. 452.
ILO (2015), Global Wage Report 2014/15: Wages and Income Inequality, International Labour Organization, Geneva, https://euro.indiana.edu/doc/archive/past-events/wcms_324678.pdf.
IMF (2012), Fiscal Monitor October 2012: Taking Stock A Progress Report on Fiscal Adjustment, Washington, DC.
IPSP (2018), Rethinking Society for the 21th Century: Report of the International Panel on Social Progress, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.
ISSC, IDS, and UNESCO (2016), World Social Science Report 2016, Challenging Inequalities: Pathways to a Just World, UNESCO Publishing, Paris, http://unesdoc.unesco.org/images/0024/002458/245825e.pdf.
Inchauste G. et al. (2017), “The distributional impact of fiscal policy in South Africa,” in Inchauste, G. and N. Lustig (eds.), The Distributional Impact of Taxes and Transfers: Evidence from Eight Low- and Middle-Income Countries, World Bank, Washington, DC.
Jaramillo, M. (2014), “The incidence of social spending and taxes in Peru,” in Lustig, N., C. Pessino, and J. Scott (eds.), “The redistributive impact of taxes and social spending in Latin America,” special issue, Public Finance Review, Vol. 42.(3), pp. 391–412.
Jayadev, A., R. Lahoti, and S.G. Reddy (2015), “Who got what, then and now? A fifty-year overview from the Global Consumption and Income Project,” Social Science Research Network, https://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.2602268.
Jenkins, S.P. (2017), “Pareto models, top incomes and recent trends in UK income inequality,” Economica, Vol. 84(334), pp. 261–289.
Jenkins, S.P. (2015), “World income inequality databases: An assessment of WIID and SWIID,” in Ferreira, F.H.G. and N. Lustig, “Appraising cross-national income inequality databases,” special issue, Journal of Economic Inequality, Vol. 13(4), pp. 629–671.
Jenkins, S.P. et al. (2011), “Measuring inequality using censored data: A multiple-imputation approach to estimation and inference,” Journal of the Royal Statistical Society, Series A, Vol. 174(1), pp. 63–81.
Jenkins, S.P. and P. Van Kerm (2009), “The measurement of economic inequality,” in Salverda, W., B. Nolan, and T. M. Smeeding (eds.), The Oxford Handbook of Economic Inequality, Oxford University Press, Oxford.
Klasen, S. et al. (2018), “Economic inequality and social progress,” in IPSP, Rethinking Society for the 21th Century: Report of the International Panel on Social Progress, Cambridge University Press.
Koen, D., M. Fleurbaey, and E. Schokkaert (2015), “Inequality, income and well-being,” in Atkinson, A. B. and F. Bourguignon (eds.), Handbook of Income Distribution, Vol. 2, Elsevier, North-Holland, Amsterdam.
Korinek, A., J.A. Mistiaen, and M. Ravallion (2006), “Survey nonresponse and the distribution of income,” Journal of Economic Inequality, Vol. 4, pp. 33–55.
Kuznets, S. (1953), Economic Change, Norton, New York.
Lakner, C. and B. Milanovic (2015), “Global income distribution: From the fall of the Berlin wall to the Great Recession,” World Bank Economic Review, Vol. 30(2), pp. 203–232, http://dx.doi.org/10.1093//lhv039.
Lemieux, T. (2006), “Increasing residual wage inequality: Composition effects, noisy data, or rising demand for skill?,” American Economic Review, Vol. 96(3), pp. 462–498.
Little, R.J.A. and D.B. Rubin. (2014), Statistical Analysis with Missing Data (2nd ed.), Wiley Series in Probability and Statistics, John Wiley and Sons, Hoboken, New Jersey.
Lopez-Calva, L.F. and N. Lustig (eds.) (2010), Declining Inequality in Latin America: A Decade of Progress?, Brookings Institution Press and UNDP, Washington, DC.
Love, J. (2016), “Christine Lagarde on income inequality, Brexit and the power of M&Ms,” Kellogg Insight, Policy, October 10, https://insight.kellogg.northwestern.edu/article/christine-lagarde-on-income-inequality-brexit-and-the-power-of-mms.
Lustig, N. (forthcoming), “The ‘missing rich’ in household surveys: Causes and correction methods,” CEQ Working Paper, No. 75, Commitment to Equity Institute, Tulane University.
Lustig, N. (ed.) (2018a), Commitment to Equity Handbook: Estimating the Impact of Fiscal Policy on Inequality and Poverty, Brookings Institution Press and CEQ Institute, Tulane University, advance online version available at www.commitmentoequity.org/publications/handbook.php.
Lustig, N. (2018b), “Fiscal policy, income redistribution and poverty reduction in low-and middle-income countries,” in Lustig, N. (ed.), Commitment to Equity Handbook: Estimating the Impact of Fiscal Policy on Inequality and Poverty, Brookings Institution Press and CEQ Institute, Tulane Univers
ity, advance online version available at www.commitmentoequity.org/publications/handbook.php.
Lustig, N. (2018c), “The sustainable development goals, domestic resource mobilization, and the poor,” in Ocampo, J.A. and J.E. Stiglitz, (eds.), The Welfare State Revisited, Columbia University Press, New York.
Lustig, N. (2016), “Inequality and fiscal redistribution in middle income countries: Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Indonesia, Mexico, Peru and South Africa,” Journal of Globalization and Development, Vol. 7(1), pp. 17–60.
Lustig, N. and D. Teles (2016), “Inequality convergence: How sensitive are results to the choice of underlying data?,” Department of Economics Working Paper, No. 1613, Tulane University, October.
Meyer, B.D., W.K.C. Mok, and J.X. Sullivan (2015), “Household surveys in crisis,” Journal of Economic Perspectives, Vol. 29(4), pp. 199–226.
Milanovic, B. (2016), Global Inequality: A New Approach for the Age of Globalization, Harvard University Press, Cambridge, MA.
Mirrlees, J.A. (1971), “The theory of optimum income taxation,” Review of Economic Studies, Vol. 38(2), pp. 175–208.
Mistiaen, J.A. and M. Ravallion (2003), “Survey compliance and the distribution of income,” Policy Research Working Paper, No. 2956, World Bank.
Novokmet F., T. Piketty, and G. Zucman (2017), “From Soviets to Oligarchs: Inequality and property in Russia 1905–2016,” WID.world Working Paper Series, No. 2017/09, Paris School of Economics.
OECD (2015), In It Together: Why Less Inequality Benefits All, OECD Publishing, Paris, http://dx.doi.org/10.1787/9789264235120-en.
OECD (2013a), OECD Guidelines for Micro Statistics on Household Wealth, OECD Publishing, Paris, http://dx.doi.org/10.1787/9789264194878-en.
OECD (2013b), OECD Framework for Statistics on the Distribution of Household Income, Consumption and Wealth, OECD Publishing, Paris, http://dx.doi.org/10.1787/9789264194830-en.
OECD (2011), Divided We Stand: Why Inequality Keeps Rising, OECD Publishing, Paris, http://dx.doi.org/10.1787/9789264119536-en.
OECD (2008), Growing Unequal? Income Distribution and Poverty in OECD Countries, OECD Publishing, Paris, http://dx.doi.org/10.1787/9789264044197-en.