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جميع محتويات المستودعالمجتمعات & الحاوياتحسب تاريخ النشرالعناوينالمواضيعالمؤلفونهذه الحاويةحسب تاريخ النشرالعناوينالمواضيعالمؤلفونProfilesView

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Measuring Inequality of Opportunities in Latin America and the Caribbean

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Author(s)
Molinas Vega, Jose R.
Ferreira, Francisco H. G.
Saavedra Chanduvi, Jaime
Paes de Barros, Ricardo
Keywords
DISTRIBUTION OF OUTCOMES
AVERAGE CHANGE
UNIVERSAL ACCESS
SOCIAL RESEARCH
INCOME REDISTRIBUTION
RESIDUAL INEQUALITY
EDUCATED MOTHERS
PROGRAMS
CHANGES IN INEQUALITY
INEQUALITY DECOMPOSITION
GOVERNMENT POLICIES
LANGUAGE BARRIERS
POLITICAL SCIENTISTS
PUBLIC POLICY
INCOME INEQUALITY
EDUCATIONAL ATTAINMENT
PRIMARY SCHOOL
DEVELOPMENT OUTCOMES
LITERACY
EMPIRICAL ANALYSIS
RIGHT
INEQUALITY TRAPS
NATIONAL LEVEL
RURAL AREAS
INFANT
PRINCIPLE OF EQUALITY
DISCRIMINATION
INEQUALITIES
ADOLESCENTS
INEQUALITY OF INCOME
REDUCING INEQUALITY
POOR CHILDREN
PRIVATE SECTOR
JUDGE
GENDER
HOUSEHOLD SURVEY
MOTHER
CITIZENS
HEALTH OUTCOMES
LABOR MARKETS
SECONDARY EDUCATION
RELATIVE INCOME
INCOMES
ABSTINENCE
SOCIAL POLICIES
RURAL DIVIDE
POVERTY REDUCTION
INDIGENOUS PEOPLE
INFANT MORTALITY
COMPUTER ACCESS
ETHNIC MINORITIES
VULNERABILITY
ECONOMIC OPPORTUNITY
HUMAN DEVELOPMENT
UNION
RURAL
LEGAL STATUS
DISSEMINATION
PROGRESS
TOTAL INEQUALITY
PRIVACY
ASSESSMENT OF INEQUALITY
NUTRITION
SANITATION
DATA SETS
MEASURE OF INEQUALITY
JOB CREATION
RESIDUAL COMPONENT
SECONDARY SCHOOLING
ENROLLMENT
SERVICES FOR CHILDREN
SOCIAL SERVICE
SINGLE-PARENT HOUSEHOLD
OVERALL INEQUALITY
EDUCATION LEVELS
POLICY MAKERS
POLITICAL ECONOMY
SOCIOECONOMIC STATUS
DISADVANTAGED GROUP
ANTIDISCRIMINATION
CONFLICT
INTERGENERATIONAL TRANSMISSION
INEQUALITY OF OPPORTUNITIES
HOUSES
MILLENNIUM DEVELOPMENT GOALS
WIDOW
LIFE EXPECTANCY
EDUCATIONAL OPPORTUNITY
EQUALITY OF OPPORTUNITY
BASIC EDUCATION
SOCIOECONOMIC BACKGROUND
ECONOMIC STUDIES
EXPLAINING INEQUALITY
MILLENNIUM DEVELOPMENT GOAL
HIGH INCOME INEQUALITY
PURCHASING POWER
UNEQUAL OUTCOMES
INEQUALITY OF OPPORTUNITY
INCOME GROUPS
EDUCATIONAL OPPORTUNITIES
LIVE BIRTHS
PRIVATIZATION
PURCHASING POWER PARITY
URBAN AREAS
GDP
PUBLIC SERVICES
ACCESS TO EDUCATION
INCOME DISTRIBUTION
EARNINGS INEQUALITY
ETHNIC MINORITY
HOUSEHOLD CONSUMPTION PER CAPITA
EQUALITY OF OPPORTUNITIES
INFANT MORTALITY RATE
SERVICE DELIVERY
LOW INCOME
SOCIOECONOMIC PROGRESS
POLICY MAKING
POSITIVE CORRELATION
LAND OWNERSHIP
HOUSEHOLD PER CAPITA INCOME
HOUSEHOLDS
LAWS
INEQUALITY
REDUCING POVERTY
SAFE WATER
RUNNING WATER
SOCIAL WELFARE
INDIVIDUAL FREEDOM
POLITICAL RIGHT
DEVELOPMENT ECONOMICS
AGRICULTURAL WORKERS
MEAN LOG DEVIATION
HOME
EARNINGS
PREGNANCY
SCHOOL ATTENDANCE
SOCIAL CONDITIONS
INEQUALITY OF TREATMENT
POVERTY ANALYSIS
EQUAL OPPORTUNITY
YOUNG PEOPLE
CAPITAL MARKETS
DISTRIBUTIONS OF INCOME
EQUITABLE ACCESS
NATURAL RESOURCES
SIMULATIONS
POOR
HOUSEHOLD CONSUMPTION
LEVEL OF EDUCATION
RACE
VILLAGE
INEQUALITY TRAP
INTERVENTIONS
JUSTICE
GLOBAL CONSENSUS
INEQUITY
AVERAGE GROWTH
ECONOMIC INEQUALITY
INVESTMENT CLIMATE
GOVERNMENT POLICY
EQUAL DISTRIBUTION
LIBERTY
PRIMARY EDUCATION
LABOR MARKET
INTERGENERATIONAL MOBILITY
DEVELOPMENT BANK
FARMER
SOCIAL DEVELOPMENT
CALORIC INTAKE
OUTCOME DATA
SOCIAL POLICY
GINI COEFFICIENT
SOCIAL SECURITY
INCOME DIFFERENCES
HOUSEHOLD SURVEY DATA
POLICY DESIGN
DEVELOPED COUNTRIES
ECONOMIC SUCCESS
RURAL DEVELOPMENT
HOUSEHOLD SURVEYS
INEQUITIES
IMMUNIZATION
WILL
MEAN CONSUMPTION
SEX
INEQUALITY REDUCTION
LEVELS OF INEQUALITY
HUMAN DEVELOPMENT INDEX
REDISTRIBUTIVE POLICIES
FISCAL POLICY
PUBLIC POLICIES
PROPERTY RIGHTS
PER CAPITA CONSUMPTION
TERTIARY EDUCATION
CONSUMPTION INEQUALITY
UNEQUAL OPPORTUNITIES
SOCIAL CONFLICT
FORMAL EDUCATION
NATIONAL COUNCIL
SOCIAL CAPITAL
FAMILY RESOURCES
ECONOMICALLY DISADVANTAGED GROUPS
RELATIVE IMPORTANCE
SOCIAL EQUALITY
EQUAL ACCESS
MACROECONOMICS
ACCESS TO FINANCE
HOUSEHOLD INCOME
INTERNATIONAL BANK
INEQUITABLE DISTRIBUTION
POSITIVE VALUE
REMITTANCES
MEASURING INEQUALITY
BASIC INFRASTRUCTURE
CLEAN WATER
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واصفات البيانات
عرض سجل المادة الكامل
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12424/244135
Online Access
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/2580
Abstract
Over the past decade, faster growth and smarter social policy have reversed the trend in Latin America's poverty. Too slowly and insufficiently, but undeniably, the percentage of Latinos who are poor has at long last begun to fall. This has shifted the political and policy debates from poverty toward inequality, something to be expected in a region that exhibits the world's most regressive distribution of development outcomes such as income, land ownership, and educational achievement. This book is a breakthrough in the measurement of human opportunity. It builds sophisticated formulas to answer a rather simple question: how much influence do personal circumstances have on the access that children get to the basic services that are necessary for a productive life? Needless to say, producing a methodology to measure human opportunity, and applying it across countries in one region, is just a first step. On the one hand, technical discussions and scientific vetting will continue, and refinements will surely follow. On the other, applying the new tool to a single country will allow for adjustments that make the findings much more useful to its policy realities. And fascinating comparative lessons could be learned by measuring human opportunity in developed countries across, say, the states of the United States or the nations of Europe. But the main message this book delivers remains a powerful one: it is possible to make equity a central purpose, if not the very definition, of development. That is, perhaps, it's most important contribution.
Date
2009
Identifier
oai:openknowledge.worldbank.org:10986/2580
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/2580
978-0-8213-7745-1
Copyright/License
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/
حاويات
Climate Ethics
Ethics in Higher Education
Gender and Theology

entitlement

 

مواد ذات صلة

عرض الملفات ذات الصلة بواسطة: العنوان، المؤلف، المنشئ والموضوع.

  • مصغرات

    Measuring Inequality of
 Opportunities in Latin America and the Caribbean

    Molinas Vega, Jose R.; Paes de Barros, Ricardo; Saavedra Chanduvi, Jaime; Ferreira, Francisco H.G. (Washington, DC: World BankNew York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2009)
    Over the past decade, faster growth and
 smarter social policy have reversed the trend in Latin
 America's poverty. Too slowly and insufficiently, but
 undeniably, the percentage of Latinos who are poor has at
 long last begun to fall. This has shifted the political and
 policy debates from poverty toward inequality, something to
 be expected in a region that exhibits the world's most
 regressive distribution of development outcomes such as
 income, land ownership, and educational achievement. This
 book is a breakthrough in the measurement of human
 opportunity. It builds sophisticated formulas to answer a
 rather simple question: how much influence do personal
 circumstances have on the access that children get to the
 basic services that are necessary for a productive life?
 Needless to say, producing a methodology to measure human
 opportunity, and applying it across countries in one region,
 is just a first step. On the one hand, technical discussions
 and scientific vetting will continue, and refinements will
 surely follow. On the other, applying the new tool to a
 single country will allow for adjustments that make the
 findings much more useful to its policy realities. And
 fascinating comparative lessons could be learned by
 measuring human opportunity in developed countries across,
 say, the states of the United States or the nations of
 Europe. But the main message this book delivers remains a
 powerful one: it is possible to make equity a central
 purpose, if not the very definition, of development. That
 is, perhaps, it's most important contribution.
  • مصغرات

    The Measurement of Inequality of Opportunity : Theory and an Application to Latin America

    Gignoux, Jérémie; Ferreira, Francisco H.G. (World Bank, Washington, DC, 2012-06-01)
    What part of the inequality observed in
 a particular country is due to unequal opportunities, rather
 than to differences in individual efforts or luck? This
 paper estimates a lower bound for the opportunity share of
 inequality in labor earnings, household income per capita
 and household consumption per capita in six Latin American
 countries. Following John Roemer, the authors associate
 inequality of opportunity with outcome differences that can
 be accounted for by morally irrelevant pre-determined
 circumstances, such as race, gender, place of birth, and
 family background. Thus defined, unequal opportunities
 account for between 24 and 50 percent of inequality in
 consumption expenditure in the sample. Brazil and Central
 America are more opportunity-unequal than Colombia, Ecuador,
 or Peru. "Opportunity profiles," which identify
 the social groups with the most limited opportunity sets,
 are shown to be distinct from poverty profiles: ethnic
 origin and the geography of birth are markedly more
 important as determinants of opportunity deprivation than of
 outcome poverty, particularly in Brazil, Guatemala, and Peru.
  • مصغرات

    Inequality of Economic Opportunity in Turkey

    Ferreira, Francisco H. G.; Gignoux, Jérémie; Aran, Meltem (World Bank, Ankara, 2017-08-15)
    Using information on asset ownership,
 housing quality, and access to services to construct an
 indicator of household wealth, the author estimates the
 share of inequality among prime-age Turkish women that can
 be attributed to unequal opportunities. Both parametric and
 non-parametric estimation methods are used, and robustness
 to some sample redefinitions is verified. The author find
 that at least one-third (one-fourth) of overall wealth
 (imputed consumption) inequality in Turkey is associated
 with morally irrelevant, pre-determined circumstances. The
 circumstances that account for the largest share of the
 variance are rural or urban birth area and father's
 education. Controlling for rural birth, parents'
 education, language spoken at home, and number of siblings,
 a three-way regional breakdown of birthplace is not an
 important predictor of wealth. An opportunity deprivation
 profile reveals that more than two thirds of the most
 deprived group in Turkey consists of women born in the rural
 areas of the Eastern region, from mothers with no formal education.
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