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:10.1093/0199278636.003.0004
Ravi Kanbur
Anthony J. Venables
The authors address the issues involved with the use of microeconomic data—household surveys—to compare the patterns of income growth among different regions instead of the commonly used aggregate data. In particular, they investigate the issues of aggregation of household income to regional income and the problem of demography. As returns to experience generally differ across regions, differences in the patterns of income growth across regions in the same time interval will differ across age groups, which means that convergence or divergence of aggregate income among regions will depend on the age structure of their population. The authors apply these concepts to the case of the states of Brazil, for which they have repeated cross sections from a rich household survey. They find that patterns of income growth vary a great deal across birth cohorts, depending on the economic returns to experience.
Keywords: birth cohorts, Brazil, micro data, regional convergence, regional growth,
doi:10.1093/0199278636.003.0004
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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