Publication | Closed Access
The Institutional Foundations of Inequality and Growth
29
Citations
41
References
2011
Year
Development EconomicsEconomic DevelopmentEducationEndogenous Growth TheoryIncome DistributionIncome InequalityEconomic GrowthInstitutional EconomicsPoverty ReductionEconomic InstitutionsProperty RightsPovertyInstitutional VarietyInsecure Property RightsEconomic InequalityInstitutional FoundationsInstitutional ChangeSocio-economic IssueSocial InequalityEconomicsPublic PolicyFinancePopulation InequalityBusinessInequality
Abstract After a decade of research, the effect of inequality on long-run economic growth remains unresolved, in part because researchers have treated omitted variable bias as an estimation problem rather than a deeper question of causality. In this article we argue that the key omitted variable is the quality of economic institutions. Using both cross-country and panel data specifications, we find no direct effect of inequality on growth in the long-run. Rather, the protection of property rights simultaneously raises growth rates and reduces income inequality. We interpret these findings as evidence that insecure property rights disproportionately disadvantage the poor.
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