Includes bibliographyDespite tremendous macroeconomic instability, Brazil's urban income distributions in 1976 and 1996 appear, at first glance, deceptively similar. Mean household income per capita was stagnant, with a minute accumulated growth of 4.3% over the two decades. The Gini coefficient hovered just above 0.59 in both years, and the incidence of poverty (with respect to a poverty line of R$60/month at 1996 prices); was effectively unchanged at 22%. Yet, behind this apparent stability, a powerful combination of labour market, demographic and educational dynamics were at work, one effect of which was to generate a substantial increase in extreme urban poverty. Using a micro-simulation-based decomposition methodology which endogenizes...
Household survey data demonstrate that Brazilian males born between 1925 and 1963 experienced steady...
This work evaluates the social effects of economic instability using a rotating panels. It is divide...
It is generally accepted that migration will lead an increase in income. However the question is how...
This paper investigates the increases in inequality observed in Brazil during the 1980s, as well as ...
Despite tremendous macroeconomic instability in Brazil, the country's distributions of urban income ...
This paper investigates possible explanations for the increases in inequality observed in Brazil dur...
Summary After a period of rapid growth in the 1970s, a macroeconomically turbulent decade of the 198...
Includes bibliographyAbstract This paper attempted to measure the evolution of income distribution a...
Formal-informal earnings differentials in urban labour markets in Brazil tend to persist and the gap...
In countries with high levels of inequality, progress in education has often been placed high in the...
Brazil's Gini coefficient rose from 0.57 in 1981 to 0.63 in 1989, before falling back to 0.56 in 200...
This paper examines the evolution of wage inequality in Brazil in the 1980s and 1990s . It tries to ...
This paper estimates changes in the rates of return to human capital across the earnings distributio...
Using a newly available comprehensive micro-data set we examine changes in the shape of the Brazilia...
This paper investigates the sources of wage inequality across Brazilian regions. Duarte, Ferreira an...
Household survey data demonstrate that Brazilian males born between 1925 and 1963 experienced steady...
This work evaluates the social effects of economic instability using a rotating panels. It is divide...
It is generally accepted that migration will lead an increase in income. However the question is how...
This paper investigates the increases in inequality observed in Brazil during the 1980s, as well as ...
Despite tremendous macroeconomic instability in Brazil, the country's distributions of urban income ...
This paper investigates possible explanations for the increases in inequality observed in Brazil dur...
Summary After a period of rapid growth in the 1970s, a macroeconomically turbulent decade of the 198...
Includes bibliographyAbstract This paper attempted to measure the evolution of income distribution a...
Formal-informal earnings differentials in urban labour markets in Brazil tend to persist and the gap...
In countries with high levels of inequality, progress in education has often been placed high in the...
Brazil's Gini coefficient rose from 0.57 in 1981 to 0.63 in 1989, before falling back to 0.56 in 200...
This paper examines the evolution of wage inequality in Brazil in the 1980s and 1990s . It tries to ...
This paper estimates changes in the rates of return to human capital across the earnings distributio...
Using a newly available comprehensive micro-data set we examine changes in the shape of the Brazilia...
This paper investigates the sources of wage inequality across Brazilian regions. Duarte, Ferreira an...
Household survey data demonstrate that Brazilian males born between 1925 and 1963 experienced steady...
This work evaluates the social effects of economic instability using a rotating panels. It is divide...
It is generally accepted that migration will lead an increase in income. However the question is how...