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Inequality and the Impact of Growth on Poverty: Comparative Evidence for Sub-Saharan Africa
256
Citations
20
References
2009
Year
Population PovertyDevelopment EconomicsEconomic DevelopmentIncome JusticeAgricultural EconomicsIncome DistributionPoverty ReductionEconomic GrowthSocial SciencesPovertyPoverty AlleviationInternational RedistributionEconomic InequalitySub-saharan AfricaSocio-economic DevelopmentAfrican DevelopmentSocial InequalityEconomicsComparative EvidencePoverty MeasurementPopulation InequalityBusinessIncome StudiesLow Income Developing CountryGdp GrowthInequalityInitial Inequality
Abstract This study explores the extent to which inequality affects the impact of income growth on the rates of poverty changes in sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) compared to non-SSA, based on an unbalanced panel of 86 countries over 1977–2004. For all three measures of poverty – headcount, gap, and squared gap – the impact of GDP growth on poverty reduction is a decreasing function of initial inequality. The impacts are similar in direction for SSA and non-SSA, so that within both regions there are considerable disparities in the responsiveness of poverty to income growth, depending on inequality. Nevertheless, the income–growth elasticity is substantially less for SSA, implying relatively small poverty-reduction response to growth.
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