We show why convergence in mean income levels and the negative relation between mean income growth and poverty changes need not lead to proportionate poverty convergence across countries. We propose an analytical framework that highlights that poverty convergence depends on the speed of income convergence relative to a complex interaction of initial inequality, mean income levels, and inequality dynamics. Our framework allows us to investigate poverty convergence, or the lack thereof, under different plausible dynamics of mean income and inequality
A number of studies have tested whether, globally, per capita incomes are converging over time. To ...
Traditional poverty accounting decomposes changes in a country's poverty headcount ratio into change...
Defining a catch-up index that measures rich-poor country income convergence and comparing it to wit...
Martin Ravallion ("Why Don't We See Poverty Convergence?" American Economic Review, 102(1): 504-23; ...
We are not seeing faster progress against poverty amongst the poorest developing countries. Yet this...
Abstract: Consistently with models of economic growth incorporating borrowing constraints, the analy...
Comparing changes in inequality with initial levels, using new data, the author finds that within-co...
A number of studies have tested whether, globally, per capita incomes are converging over time. To d...
Convergence concerns the poor catching up with the rich|if not instan- taneously, then at least havi...
A number of studies have tested whether, globally, per capita incomes are converging over time. To d...
A number of studies have tested whether, globally, per capita incomes are converging over time. To d...
Neoclassical models imply convergence of the entire distribution, not just the mean income levels. I...
We develop an integrated framework for studying income convergence that incorporates traditional mea...
We examine the record of cross-country growth over the past 50 years and ask if developing countries...
For decades economic growth and its determinants have been the centre of attention among both theore...
A number of studies have tested whether, globally, per capita incomes are converging over time. To ...
Traditional poverty accounting decomposes changes in a country's poverty headcount ratio into change...
Defining a catch-up index that measures rich-poor country income convergence and comparing it to wit...
Martin Ravallion ("Why Don't We See Poverty Convergence?" American Economic Review, 102(1): 504-23; ...
We are not seeing faster progress against poverty amongst the poorest developing countries. Yet this...
Abstract: Consistently with models of economic growth incorporating borrowing constraints, the analy...
Comparing changes in inequality with initial levels, using new data, the author finds that within-co...
A number of studies have tested whether, globally, per capita incomes are converging over time. To d...
Convergence concerns the poor catching up with the rich|if not instan- taneously, then at least havi...
A number of studies have tested whether, globally, per capita incomes are converging over time. To d...
A number of studies have tested whether, globally, per capita incomes are converging over time. To d...
Neoclassical models imply convergence of the entire distribution, not just the mean income levels. I...
We develop an integrated framework for studying income convergence that incorporates traditional mea...
We examine the record of cross-country growth over the past 50 years and ask if developing countries...
For decades economic growth and its determinants have been the centre of attention among both theore...
A number of studies have tested whether, globally, per capita incomes are converging over time. To ...
Traditional poverty accounting decomposes changes in a country's poverty headcount ratio into change...
Defining a catch-up index that measures rich-poor country income convergence and comparing it to wit...