Tuesday, May 19, 2015

Income inequality actually declining in some Asian countries

Income inequality actually declining in some Asian countries


[SINGAPORE] The gap between the rich and the poor has been growing across the world. But there is a handful of countries in the Asia-Pacific region where it has decreased, and it isn't just the Piketty effect.
The population-weighted mean Gini coefficient for the entire region rose from 33.5 to 37.5 between the 1990s and 2014, with income inequality particularly wide in the biggest developing countries, including China, India and Indonesia.
In the mean time, income distribution between the top 20 percent relative to the bottom 20 per cent actually improved in several countries in that period, including Azerbaijan, Cambodia and Thailand, according to a report from United Nations' Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific.
Large reductions in inequality were seen in North and Central Asia, including Armenia, Kyrgyzstan, the Russian Federation and Uzbekistan, the UNESCAP report showed.


"The past two decades witnessed a rapid increase in the middle-class population, due in no small part to industrialization," said Aekapol Chongvilaivan, a strategy and policy economist at the Asian Development Bank in Manila. "As labor is relocated from traditional agricultural sectors to industries, they earn higher incomes."
Also, in the case of countries such as Thailand and Malaysia, social-safety nets have been strengthened and have helped reduce income inequality, he said. 
Widespread inequality wasn't always the case: in the decades up to 1990 several economies in East Asia experienced rapid economic growth and declining inequality, due to the combination of sound development policies and government intervention to foster development, UNESCAP said.
"This trend changed starting in the late 1980s, coinciding with the introduction of deregulation, privatization, globalization and pro-cyclical macro policies," the report said.
BLOOMBERG

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