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Inequality and Growth

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TLDR
In this article, the authors present and extend the main theories linking income distribution and growth, as well as the relevant empirical evidence, using two unifying models and an empirical exercise.
Abstract
Using two unifying models and an empirical exercise, this paper present and extends the main theories linking income distribution and growth, as well as the relevant empirical evidence. The first model integrates the political economy and imperfect capital markets theories. It allows for explicit departures from perfect democracy and embodies the tradeoff between the growth costs and benefits of redistribution through taxes, land reform or public schooling: such policies simultaneously depress savings incentives and ease wealth constraints which impede investment by the poor. The second model is a growth version of the prisoner's dilemma which captures the essence of theories where sociopolitical conflict reduces the security of property rights thereby discouraging accumulation. The economy's growth rate is shown to fall with interest groups' rent-seeking abilities, as well as with the gap between rich and poor. It is not income inequality per se that matters, but inequality in the relative distribution of earnings and political power. For each of the three channels of political economy, capital markets and social conflict, the empirical evidence is surveyed and discussed in conjunction with theoretical analysis. Finally, the possibility of multiple steady-states leads me to to raise and take up a new empirical issue: are cross-country differences in inequality permanent, or gradually narrowing? Equivalently, is there conver- gence not only in first moments (GDP per capita), but convergence in distribution?

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A Reassessment of the Relationship between Inequality and Growth

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors used an improved data set on income inequality which not only reduces measurement error, but also allows estimation via a panel technique, and found that in the short and medium term, an increase in a country's level of income inequality has a significant positive relationship with subsequent economic growth.
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Inequality and Economic Growth: The Perspective of the New Growth Theories

TL;DR: This paper analyzed the relationship between inequality and economic growth from two directions, showing that when capital markets are imperfect, there is not necessarily a trade-off between equity and efficiency, and provided an explanation for two recent empirical findings, namely, the negative impact of inequality and the positive effect of redistribution upon growth.
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Finance, inequality and the poor

TL;DR: This article found that financial development disproportionately boosts incomes of the poorest quintile and reduces income inequality, and that about 40% of the long-run impact of financial development on the income growth was due to reductions in income inequality.
References
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A sensitivity analysis of cross-country growth regressions

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Government spending in a simple model of endogenous growth

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Income Distribution and Macroeconomics

TL;DR: The authors analyzes the role of wealth distribution in macroeconomics through investment in human capital and shows that the initial distribution of wealth affects aggregate output and investment both in the short and in the long run, as there are multiple steady states.