What You See Is horizontal ellipsis . Not All There Is: Global Income Inequality From a Quasi-Marxist Perspective

被引:0
作者
Kumar, Rishabh [1 ,2 ]
机构
[1] Univ Massachusetts Boston, Boston, MA USA
[2] Wheatley Hall,5th Floor,Room 082 100 William T Mor, Boston, MA 02125 USA
关键词
Global income inequality; inequality extraction ratio; Gini; interpersonal inequality; classical political economy; capitalist development; corruption; exploitation; GROWTH; WAGE;
D O I
10.1080/09538259.2023.2197399
中图分类号
F [经济];
学科分类号
02 ;
摘要
The standard interpretation of inequality uses a number, such as the Gini coefficient, to compare income inequality across countries. These numbers apply universal upper limits to the maximum feasible inequality (Gini = 100) in vastly diverse economies even though floors for socially acceptable living standards vary quite a bit in different societies. I develop a new measure of income inequality - the Nationally Representative Inequality Extraction Ratio (NR IER) - and apply it to 112 countries. The NR IER uses country-by-country social and economic parameters to measure the distance between the actual income distribution and the country-specific feasible limit (a counterfactual distribution). I ground the counterfactual distribution in a functional income concept, corresponding to Marx's concept of exploitation. NR IERs are inversely related to per-capita income and exceed the feasible limits in the world's poorest countries. However, I find little variation in extractive inequality between closed autocracies (e.g., China) - where corruption is expectedly extractive - and liberal democracies (e.g., USA). Controlling for different political regimes, the NR IER explains over 60 per cent of a person's income anywhere in the world.
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页码:142 / 164
页数:23
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