This paper uses various decomposition techniques to understand the nature of household inequality in contemporary South Africa. It examines, firstly, the importance of race in overall inequality; secondly, the contribution of major income sources to national inequality; and thirdly, the relationship between inequality, poverty and the labour market
There has been considerable effort in ascertaining with confidence the trends in income inequality i...
Commissioned by the Institute for the Study of Labor (IZA) in Bonn, Germany, FebruaryIn this paper w...
This paper initiates the project of mapping the class structure of South Africa at the end of the ap...
South Africa's very high Gini coefficient has always served as the starkest indicator of the country...
South Africa remains one of the most unequal countries in the world. The current levels of inequalit...
The first democratic elections in 1994 brought about the promise for equal opportunity and an overal...
The existing work on household poverty and inequality in South Africa has shown that poverty and ine...
In South Africa’s apartheid regime a white minority controlled the black African majority from 1948 ...
This doctoral thesis analyses the changes in income inequality in post-apartheid South Africa. The t...
Previous studies have decomposed South African income inequality into inequality between and within ...
There has been very little detailed exploration of the relationship between wage income and househol...
This paper provides an analysis of poverty in South Africa by focussing on the labour market. It see...
South Africa was one of the most unequal countries in the world in 1994 and inequality has featured ...
This paper describes the changes in inequality in South Africa over the post-apartheid period, using...
South Africa faces many socio-economic challenges, which include sluggish economic growth, increasin...
There has been considerable effort in ascertaining with confidence the trends in income inequality i...
Commissioned by the Institute for the Study of Labor (IZA) in Bonn, Germany, FebruaryIn this paper w...
This paper initiates the project of mapping the class structure of South Africa at the end of the ap...
South Africa's very high Gini coefficient has always served as the starkest indicator of the country...
South Africa remains one of the most unequal countries in the world. The current levels of inequalit...
The first democratic elections in 1994 brought about the promise for equal opportunity and an overal...
The existing work on household poverty and inequality in South Africa has shown that poverty and ine...
In South Africa’s apartheid regime a white minority controlled the black African majority from 1948 ...
This doctoral thesis analyses the changes in income inequality in post-apartheid South Africa. The t...
Previous studies have decomposed South African income inequality into inequality between and within ...
There has been very little detailed exploration of the relationship between wage income and househol...
This paper provides an analysis of poverty in South Africa by focussing on the labour market. It see...
South Africa was one of the most unequal countries in the world in 1994 and inequality has featured ...
This paper describes the changes in inequality in South Africa over the post-apartheid period, using...
South Africa faces many socio-economic challenges, which include sluggish economic growth, increasin...
There has been considerable effort in ascertaining with confidence the trends in income inequality i...
Commissioned by the Institute for the Study of Labor (IZA) in Bonn, Germany, FebruaryIn this paper w...
This paper initiates the project of mapping the class structure of South Africa at the end of the ap...