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Inequality and the Post-2015 Agenda David Woodward Development Studies Association Annual Conference, Birmingham, 16 November 2013

Inequality and the Post-2015 Agenda - presentation by David Woodward

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David Woodward is an independent consultant on development issues, author of Debt, Adjustment and Poverty in Developing Countries (1992) and The Next Crisis? Direct and Equity Investment in Developing Countries (2001), and is co-editor of Global Public Goods for Health (2003) For the occasion of The Development Studies Association Annual Conference 2013 16 November 2013, Birmingham Panel 25: Inequality and the Post 2015 Agenda, organised by the Broker http://thebrokeronline.eu/Articles/Inequality-is-politics

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Page 1: Inequality and the Post-2015 Agenda - presentation by David Woodward

Inequality and the Post-2015 Agenda

David Woodward

Development Studies Association Annual Conference, Birmingham, 16 November 2013

Page 2: Inequality and the Post-2015 Agenda - presentation by David Woodward

National Gini Coefficients: Frequency Distribution (c2005)

Page 3: Inequality and the Post-2015 Agenda - presentation by David Woodward

National Gini Coefficients: Frequency Distribution (c2005)

Inter-quartilerange

Page 4: Inequality and the Post-2015 Agenda - presentation by David Woodward

National Gini Coefficients: Frequency Distribution (c2005)

Page 5: Inequality and the Post-2015 Agenda - presentation by David Woodward

National Gini Coefficients: Frequency Distribution (c2005)

Page 6: Inequality and the Post-2015 Agenda - presentation by David Woodward

Global Income Distribution, 2005

Income pc (multiple of world average)

Branko Milanovic (2012) Global Inequality Recalculated and Updated. Journal of Economic Inequality 10(1):1-18, March.

Page 7: Inequality and the Post-2015 Agenda - presentation by David Woodward

Global Income Distribution, 2005

Page 8: Inequality and the Post-2015 Agenda - presentation by David Woodward

Global Income Distribution, 2005

Page 9: Inequality and the Post-2015 Agenda - presentation by David Woodward

Global Income Distribution, 2005

Page 10: Inequality and the Post-2015 Agenda - presentation by David Woodward

Global Income Distribution, 2005

Page 11: Inequality and the Post-2015 Agenda - presentation by David Woodward

Global Income Distribution, 2005

Top 1%: 10.4%(7 million people)

Bottom 60%: 10.1%(4,200 million people)

Page 12: Inequality and the Post-2015 Agenda - presentation by David Woodward

Global Income Distribution, 2005

Income pc of top 1% = 260 times bottom 10%

Page 13: Inequality and the Post-2015 Agenda - presentation by David Woodward

Global Palma Index, 2005

Top 10%: 55.5%

Bottom 40%: 4.1%

Page 14: Inequality and the Post-2015 Agenda - presentation by David Woodward

Global Palma Index, 2005

Top 10%: 55.5%

Bottom 40%: 4.1%

Palma Index = 13.54

Page 15: Inequality and the Post-2015 Agenda - presentation by David Woodward

Global Palma Index, 2005

Top 10%: 55.5%

Bottom 40%: 4.1%

Palma Index = 13.54

60% of countries < 2.0(Cobham & Sumner, 2012)

Page 16: Inequality and the Post-2015 Agenda - presentation by David Woodward

Woodward, D. (2013) "Incrementum ad Absurdum: Global Growth, Inequality and Poverty Eradication in a Carbon-Constrained World", article submitted to World Economic Review. http://werdiscussion.worldeconomicsassociation.org/wp-content/uploads/Woodward.pdf

NB all graphs use log scale

Page 17: Inequality and the Post-2015 Agenda - presentation by David Woodward

declining

rising

Page 18: Inequality and the Post-2015 Agenda - presentation by David Woodward
Page 19: Inequality and the Post-2015 Agenda - presentation by David Woodward
Page 20: Inequality and the Post-2015 Agenda - presentation by David Woodward

AcceleratingdeclineDecelerating

increase

Page 21: Inequality and the Post-2015 Agenda - presentation by David Woodward

Composition of Poorest World Decile

Page 22: Inequality and the Post-2015 Agenda - presentation by David Woodward

Composition of Poorest World Decile

Page 23: Inequality and the Post-2015 Agenda - presentation by David Woodward

Poverty Eradication in a “Business-as-Usual” World?

• Treat China and the rest of the world separately• Extrapolate global decile income pc growth

relative to global GDP pc• Assume (conservatively) lowest income is half

mean of lowest (non-China) decile– (or 1% poverty can be dealt with by income transfers)

• Estimate– Level of GDP pc required to eradicate poverty (+ GDP)– How long to reach this income level at 1993-2010

global growth rate

Page 24: Inequality and the Post-2015 Agenda - presentation by David Woodward

Results ($1.25-a-day)

• Eradicating poverty– requires GDP pc > $110,000 (2005 PPP)

• 11x 2010 level• 3.3x high-income OECD average

– increasing global GDP by a factor of nearly 15– takes >100 years at 1993-2010 global growth rate

• By comparison– Poverty gap = 0.6% of global GDP (PPP)– Poverty eradication = 0.04% of increase in GDP

Page 25: Inequality and the Post-2015 Agenda - presentation by David Woodward

Results ($5-a-day)

• Eradicating poverty– requires GDP pc > $1.35m (2005 PPP)

• 135x 2010 level• 40x high-income OECD average

– increasing global GDP by a factor of >170– takes >200 years at 1993-2010 global growth rate

• By comparison– Poverty gap = 6.7% of global GDP (PPP)– Poverty eradication = 0.04% of increase in GDP

Page 26: Inequality and the Post-2015 Agenda - presentation by David Woodward

Progress to 2030 (Regional Approach)

• $1.25-a-day poverty <1% in Europe/Central Asia and East Asia Pacific

• 1-4% in Middle East/North Africa and Latin America/Caribbean– NB wide country variations (esp. EAP)

• South Asia 12%• Sub-Saharan Africa 37% (cf 2015 goal: 28%)• Total poverty 700 million (2.5-3bn at $5pd)

Page 27: Inequality and the Post-2015 Agenda - presentation by David Woodward

A Gini Goal?

• Advantages– Widely used– Covers the whole income distribution

• Disadvantages– Significance not intuitively obvious– No clear ideal level (cf poverty, child mortality)– Too sensitive to the middle of the distribution cf

extremes

Page 28: Inequality and the Post-2015 Agenda - presentation by David Woodward

A Palma Goal?

• Advantages– Simple– Clear meaning

• Disadvantages– No “ideal” level– No account of distribution within 10/50/40% bands– Based on observed empirical regularity in country

data, which may not apply globally

Page 29: Inequality and the Post-2015 Agenda - presentation by David Woodward

A Convergence Goal?

• A target for narrowing gaps between income deciles (eg by a quarter/a third/half)

Page 30: Inequality and the Post-2015 Agenda - presentation by David Woodward

A Convergence Goal?

• Advantages– Intuitively clear– Covers the whole distribution

• Disadvantages– Multiple targets– No account of distribution within deciles (esp. top)• could supplement with target for top 1% share in top

decile.

Page 31: Inequality and the Post-2015 Agenda - presentation by David Woodward

Convergence Goal: an Illustration(Gap Reduction ¼)

Page 32: Inequality and the Post-2015 Agenda - presentation by David Woodward

Gaps between Global Income Deciles (%)

Page 33: Inequality and the Post-2015 Agenda - presentation by David Woodward

Gaps between Global Income Deciles (%)

Greatest absolute reduction at extremes

Page 34: Inequality and the Post-2015 Agenda - presentation by David Woodward

Convergence Goal: an Illustration(Gap Reduction ¼)

Page 35: Inequality and the Post-2015 Agenda - presentation by David Woodward

Convergence Goal: an Illustration(Gap Reduction ¼)

-16%+0%

+16%+37%+40%+53%+65%+78%+94%

+122%

Page 36: Inequality and the Post-2015 Agenda - presentation by David Woodward

Convergence Goal: an Illustration(Gap Reduction ¼)

-16%+0%

+16%+37%+40%+53%+65%+78%+94%

+122%

All but top c 15% gain income share

Page 37: Inequality and the Post-2015 Agenda - presentation by David Woodward

Convergence Goal: an Illustration(Gap Reduction ¼)

-16%+0%

+16%+37%+40%+53%+65%+78%+94%

+122%

All but top c 15% gain income share

Poorest c 17% more than double income share

Page 38: Inequality and the Post-2015 Agenda - presentation by David Woodward

Convergence Goal: an Illustration(Gap Reduction ¼)

-16%+0%

+16%+37%+40%+53%+65%+78%+94%

+122%

Top decile income grows 1% pa less than

global GDP pcAll but top c 15% gain income share

Poorest c 17% more than double income share

Page 39: Inequality and the Post-2015 Agenda - presentation by David Woodward

Convergence Goal: an Illustration(Gap Reduction ¼)

Top 10% 55.5% 46.6%

Page 40: Inequality and the Post-2015 Agenda - presentation by David Woodward

Convergence Goal: an Illustration(Gap Reduction ¼)

Bottom 40%:4.1% 7.4%

Top 10% 55.5% 46.6%

Page 41: Inequality and the Post-2015 Agenda - presentation by David Woodward

Convergence Goal: an Illustration(Gap Reduction ¼)

Bottom 40%:4.1% 7.4%

Palma index:13.5 6.3

Top 10% 55.5% 46.6%

Page 42: Inequality and the Post-2015 Agenda - presentation by David Woodward

Convergence Goal: an Illustration(Gap Reduction ¼)

Bottom 40%:4.1% 7.4%

Palma index:13.5 6.3

Top 10% 55.5% 46.6%

Highest except Jamaica, Namibia,

South Africa

Page 43: Inequality and the Post-2015 Agenda - presentation by David Woodward

How do we do it?

• Income transfers?– Needs are too great– National resources inadequate– International transfers not financially sustainable– Politically untenable– Logistically problematic

Page 44: Inequality and the Post-2015 Agenda - presentation by David Woodward

How do we do it?• Employment/livelihoods in developing countries• Requires – a better development model – economic transformation– a more supportive international environment– a more pro-development global system– more democratic global economic governance

• as well as– a successful exit from the financial crisis– an effective, pro-development solution to climate change

• All absent from Post-2015 discussions (as MDGs)

Page 45: Inequality and the Post-2015 Agenda - presentation by David Woodward

Transformation Requires Investment

• Economic transformation = expansion, diversification and increased productivity

• Requires investment– in the right sectors– commercially viable/competitive– productive– job-creating– forward/backward linkages

Page 46: Inequality and the Post-2015 Agenda - presentation by David Woodward

Investment Requires…• Demand growth (+external/domestic rebalancing)– less restrictive macro policies– wage growth proportional to productivity increase

• Technology– access– opportunity and capacity to adapt

• Infrastructure– transport, communications, energy, social….

• Finance– financial sector focused on intermediation, productive

investment– mobilising diaspora resources – best of both worlds?

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A Developmental State

• Solid tax base and collection capacity• Adequate/appropriate infrastructure

investment• Active industrial policy• Productive deployment as well as production

of human capital

Page 48: Inequality and the Post-2015 Agenda - presentation by David Woodward

Global Economy

"Everyone is entitled to a social and international order in which the rights and freedoms set forth in this Declaration can be fully realised." (UDHR, Article 28)

“Everyone has the right to a standard of living adequate for the health and well-being of himself and of his family, including food, clothing, housing and medical care and necessary social services” (UDHR, Article 25.1)

ie an entitlement to an international order conducive to poverty eradication

Page 49: Inequality and the Post-2015 Agenda - presentation by David Woodward

Global Economy

• International financial system– Financial stability– Policy coordination– Crisis prevention and effective resolution– Management of tax competition

• International trade system– Trade barriers, subsidies, etc– Policy space for industrial policy– Access to, and opportunity to adapt, technologies

Page 50: Inequality and the Post-2015 Agenda - presentation by David Woodward

Global Economic Governance

• Coherence/consolidation/codification• Democratisation (cf national level)– a system that will serve the interests of the

majority of the world population

• Time for a new Bretton Woods?