Kanbur, Ravi Cornell University
Venables, Anthony J. London School of Economics
Print publication date: 2005 (this edition)
Published to Oxford Scholarship Online: April 2005
Print ISBN-13: 978-0-19-927863-3
doi:10.1093/0199278636.003.0013
Ravi Kanbur
Anthony J. Venables
The authors report levels of income inequality and poverty in four Central and Eastern European countries: the Czech Republic, Hungary, Poland, and Russia. Unlike many previous studies that examine transition economies, they aggregate the detailed individual-level income surveys made available through the efforts of the Luxembourg Income Study at the regional level of analysis. Although national-level investigations have contributed much to our understanding of the income distribution dynamics, these studies mask intracountry variance in levels of income inequality and thus may not capture the true distribution of household income and accurately reflect individual well-being. Accordingly, the authors compute summary measures of inequality and relative poverty rates, using both local and national relative poverty lines, for the most recent waves of data available.
Keywords: Central and Eastern Europe, income inequality, poverty, regions,
doi:10.1093/0199278636.003.0013
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PART I INTRODUCTION
PART II MEASUREMENT OF SPATIAL INEQUALITY
PART III LOCATION, EXTERNALITIES, AND UNEQUAL DEVELOPMENT
PART V GROWTH AND POVERTY REDUCTION — THE REGIONAL LINKAGE
PART VI TRADE, WAGES, AND REGIONAL INEQUALITY
VII SPATIAL INEQUALITY DURING TRANSITION