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Education and income distribution in urban Brazil, 1976-1996
Author(s) -
Francisco H. G. Ferreira,
Ricardo Paes de Barros
Publication year - 2000
Publication title -
cepal review
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.117
H-Index - 13
eISSN - 1684-0348
pISSN - 0251-2920
DOI - 10.18356/e434f6eb-en
Subject(s) - poverty , gini coefficient , economics , dependency ratio , distribution (mathematics) , income distribution , per capita income , demographic economics , labour economics , extreme poverty , per capita , inequality , economic inequality , economic growth , population , demography , sociology , mathematics , mathematical analysis
Despite tremendous macroeconomic instability, Brazil's urban income distributions in 1976 and 1996 appear, at first glance, deceptively similar. Mean household income per capita was stagnant, with a minute accumulated growth of 4.3% over the two decades. The Gini coefficient hovered just above 0.59 in both years, and the incidence of poverty (with respect to a poverty line of R$60/month at 1996 prices); was effectively unchanged at 22%. Yet, behind this apparent stability, a powerful combination of labour market, demographic and educational dynamics were at work, one effect of which was to generate a substantial increase in extreme urban poverty. Using a micro-simulation-based decomposition methodology which endogenizes labour incomes, individual occupational choices and education decisions, we show that the distribution of incomes was being affected, on the one hand, by a decline in average returns to both education and experience and by impoverishing changes in the structure of occupations and labour force participation (all of which tended to increase poverty);, and on the other hand by an increase in educational endowments across the distribution and a progressive reduction in dependency ratios (both of which tended to reduce poverty);.

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