Publication | Closed Access
Social Exclusion and Economic Growth: An Empirical Investigation in European Economies
30
Citations
83
References
2013
Year
Real GdpPopulation PovertySocioeconomicsEconomic DevelopmentSocial IndicatorIncome DistributionSocial ExclusionSocial InclusionIncome InequalityEconomic GrowthHuman Capital DevelopmentInternational RedistributionPublic HealthEconomic InequalitySocio-economic IssueSocial InequalityEconomicsHousehold StudiesInclusive GrowthSocial BenefitsPopulation InequalityEuropean EconomiesSociologyBusiness
The aims of this article are to propose an overall index of social exclusion and to analyze its relationship with economic growth in European countries. We approach social exclusion as a multidimensional phenomenon by a three‐mode principal components analysis (Tucker3 model). This method is applied to estimate an indicator of social exclusion for 28 European countries between 1995 and 2010. The empirical evidence shows that in the short run: (1) Granger causality runs one way from social exclusion to economic growth and not the other way; (2) countries with a higher level of social exclusion have higher growth rates of real GDP per capita; and (3) social exclusion has a larger effect than income inequality on economic growth. The policy implication of our analysis is that social inclusion is not a source of economic growth in the short term.
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