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Vito Peragine

Bio: Vito Peragine is an academic researcher from University of Bari. The author has contributed to research in topics: Inequality & Economic inequality. The author has an hindex of 22, co-authored 78 publications receiving 2098 citations. Previous affiliations of Vito Peragine include Institute for the Study of Labor.


Papers
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TL;DR: In this article, the authors provide a methodology to measure opportunity inequality and to decompose overall income inequality in an "ethically offensive" and an "entirely acceptable" part.
Abstract: In this paper we provide a methodology to measure opportunity inequality and to decompose overall income inequality in an “ethically offensive” and an “ethically acceptable” part. Moreover, we analyze inequality of opportunity in Italy. According to our results, inequality of opportunity accounts for about 20% of overall income inequality in Italy. Moreover, the regions in the South are characterized by a higher degree of opportunity inequality than the regions in the North, especially when considering population subgroups by gender.

391 citations

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TL;DR: The authors study the difference between the ex post and the ex ante perspectives in equality of opportunity and the possibility of a clash between them, and show that the tension between reward and compensation only exists if one endorses an ex post view of EOP; on the contrary, it vanishes if one adopts an ex ante view of the same idea.
Abstract: We study the difference between the ex post and the ex ante perspectives in equality of opportunity (EOp), and the possibility of a clash between them. We argue that ex ante EOp is a potential trap because someone motivated by ex post EOp may be led to believe that ex ante EOp is another natural embodiment of the same idea. As we show, it is not. Moreover, we explore the relationship between the ex post/ex ante tension and the well documented clash between the "compensation principle" and various "reward principles": we show that the tension between reward and compensation only exists if one endorses an ex post view of EOp; on the contrary, it vanishes if one adopts an ex ante view of equality of opportunity.

183 citations

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TL;DR: In this paper, the authors characterize new individual and aggregate measures of deprivation and social exclusion using an axiomatic approach, and apply them to EU data for the period 1994-2001.
Abstract: Social exclusion manifests itself in the persistent relative lack of an individual's access to functionings compared with other members of society, and we model it as being in a state of deprivation over time. We view deprivation as having two basic determinants: the lack of identification with other members of society, and the aggregate alienation experienced by an agent with respect to those having fewer functioning failures. Using an axiomatic approach, we characterize new individual and aggregate measures of deprivation and social exclusion. The aggregate measures are then applied to EU data for the period 1994–2001.

158 citations

Posted Content
TL;DR: In this article, a new methodology was proposed to measure opportunity inequality and to decompose overall inequality in an "ethically offensive" and an "entirely acceptable" part, which was used to compare the income distributions of South and North of Italy on the basis of a measure of opportunity inequality.
Abstract: In this paper we provide a new methodology to measure opportunity inequality and to decompose overall inequality in an "ethically offensive" and an "ethically acceptable" part. Moreover, we provide some empirical applications of these new evaluation tools: in the first exercise, we compare the income distributions of South and North of Italy on the basis of a measure of opportunity inequality. Then, we repeat the exercise using the cognitive abilities in a sample of 15-year old students. In both circumstances we find that the less developed regions in the South are characterized by greater incidence of inequality of opportunity.

108 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
Vito Peragine1
TL;DR: In this article, the authors derive welfare and inequality criteria that respect the principle of opportunity egalitarian ethics and characterize axiomatically classes of opportunity-egalistic social evaluation functions, and then, by requiring unanimous agreement among such classes, provide simple distributional conditions to rank income distributions.
Abstract: According to the opportunity egalitarian ethics, economic inequalities due to factors beyond the individual responsibility are inequitable and to be compensated by society, whereas inequalities due to personal responsibility are equitable and not to be compensated. In this paper we derive welfare and inequality criteria that respect this principle of justice. We characterize axiomatically classes of opportunity egalitarian social evaluation functions. Then, by requiring unanimous agreement among such classes, we provide simple distributional conditions to rank income distributions. These criteria extend the Lorenz and generalized Lorenz partial orderings, commonly used in the unidimensional case of income distributions, to the current context of equality of opportunity.

101 citations


Cited by
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TL;DR: This paper proposed a new methodology for multidimensional poverty measurement consisting of an identification method ρk that extends the traditional intersection and union approaches, and a class of poverty measures Mα.
Abstract: This paper proposes a new methodology for multidimensional poverty measurement consisting of an identification method ρk that extends the traditional intersection and union approaches, and a class of poverty measures Mα. Our identification step employs two forms of cutoff: one within each dimension to determine whether a person is deprived in that dimension, and a second across dimensions that identifies the poor by ‘counting’ the dimensions in which a person is deprived. The aggregation step employs the FGT measures, appropriately adjusted to account for multidimensionality. The axioms are presented as joint restrictions on identification and the measures, and the methodology satisfies a range of desirable properties including decomposability. The identification method is particularly well suited for use with ordinal data, as is the first of our measures, the adjusted headcount ratio. We present some dominance results and an interpretation of the adjusted headcount ratio as a measure of unfreedom. Examples from the US and Indonesia illustrate our methodology.

2,040 citations

Journal ArticleDOI

1,828 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The authors proposed a new methodology for multidimensional poverty measurement consisting of an identification method ρk that extends the traditional intersection and union approaches, and a class of poverty measures Mα.

1,677 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
Miles Corak1
TL;DR: In this article, the authors discuss the underlying drivers of opportunity that generate the relationship between inequality and intergenerational mobility, and explain why America differs from other countries, how intergeneration mobility will change in an era of higher inequality, and how the process is different for the top 1 percent.
Abstract: My focus is on the degree to which increasing inequality in the high-income countries, particularly in the United States, is likely to limit economic mobility for the next generation of young adults. I discuss the underlying drivers of opportunity that generate the relationship between inequality and intergenerational mobility. The goal is to explain why America differs from other countries, how intergenerational mobility will change in an era of higher inequality, and how the process is different for the top 1 percent. I begin by presenting evidence that countries with more inequality at one point in time also experience less earnings mobility across the generations, a relationship that has been called “The Great Gatsby Curve.” The interaction between families, labor markets, and public policies all structure a child's opportunities and determine the extent to which adult earnings are related to family background—but they do so in different ways across national contexts. Both cross-country compa...

1,169 citations