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  • 1
    Book
    Book
    New York, NY : Palgrave Macmillan
    UID:
    gbv_79140773X
    Format: XIII, 275 S. , graph. Darst.
    Edition: 1. ed.
    ISBN: 9781137397126
    Note: Includes bibliographical references and index , Enth. 12 Beitr
    Language: English
    Keywords: Entwicklungsländer ; Öffentliche Schulden ; Inselstaat ; Kleinstaat ; Internationaler Vergleich ; Aufsatzsammlung
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  • 2
    UID:
    gbv_879776331
    Note: Incluye Bibliografía
    In: Política macroeconómica y pobreza en América Latina y el Caribe - Madrid : Mundi-Prensa, 1998 - p. 541-574
    Language: Spanish
    URL: Volltext  (kostenfrei)
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  • 3
    UID:
    gbv_879555173
    Series Statement: Serie Reformas Económicas 57
    Content: Introduction The last two decades have witnessed the implementation of liberal economic reforms throughout the developing world, but particularly in Latin American and the Caribbean. It is now a stylized fact of reform programs that income distribution worsens in the immediate aftermath of the implementation of such reforms (Cornia, et. al., 1987; Morley, 1995; Beccaria, 1998). In 11 of 14 Latin American countries included in his survey, Morely (1994) found that inequality had worsened in all but four of them during the 1980s when reform programs were implemented. In that regard, Jamaica has been a paradox. Handa and King (1997) date economic reform as taking place mostly since 1989. Throughout the 1990s, however, the income distribution has consistently narrowed, despite periods of both rising and falling poverty levels during this time. The decline in inequality in Jamaica is unusual for another reason as well. While economic growth may on occasion be accompanied by declining inequality, witness Brazil in the 1980s, the preponderance of evidence from the Latin American/Caribbean region suggests that inequality is strongly countercyclical (Psacharopolous, et al., 1997; Morley, 1994). During the 1980s, Argentina, Panama, and Venezuela all experienced increases in inequality while their per capita incomes fell, while Columbia and Costa Rica both had positive growth and declines in inequality (Psacharopolous, et. al., 1997).1 At the same time, there is no prior measured experience in the region of declining inequality in the presence of falling per capita income. The case of Jamaica, with just such an occurance in the period 1992 to 1996, therefore merits close scrutiny. The Jamaica experience can potentially reveal much about how the process of adjustment can affect income distribution. Are the distributional outcomes in Jamaica an accident of the particular circumstances of the adjustment, or are there lessons in the manner of adjustment that have implications for other reforming economies? The earliest published attempt to analyze the degree of income inequality in Jamaica (Ahiram, 1964), using data for 1958, concludes that Jamaica suffered a higher degree of income inequality than most developing countries with data available at the time.2 Ahiram reports a Gini of 53 percent for the distribution of household income and 57 percent for the distribution of individual income. Londoño and Székely (1997) report that, by 1970, Jamaica was characterized by one of the most equal distributions in the Latin American and Caribbean region, though the region tends to be more unequal than the remainder of the developing world. They report a Gini of 45.6 for 1970, which by 1989 had fallen marginally to 43.3. From the data reported below, in 1996 the Gini was down to 36.9. The purpose of this paper is to examine the distributional changes in Jamaica in order to explain the paradox of such a dramatic decline in inequality during and after a period of economic reform, and, after 1992, in the presence of macroeconomic stagnation. While the penchant for liberal economic reforms has shifted the focus away from issues of distribution, the concern in the literature and in this paper for inequality derives from two considerations. Ravallian (1997) has demonstrated that the growth elasticity of poverty is inversely correlated with the degree of inequality. Thus, as inequality increases, growth has a smaller impact on poverty reduction. A concern for absolute poverty therefore requires an interest in distribution to the extent that it informs the likelihood of poverty reduction. Moreover, the link between initial inequality and subsequent economic growth has been demonstrated (Deininger and Squire, 1998; Birdsall, et al., 1995). The remainder of the paper is organized as follows. Section 1 reviews the data on changes in the distribution of income that have occurred during the period. Section 2 summarizes the economic reform program and the macroeconomic context of the period under analysis, examining the extent to which the manner and pace of reform implementation explains the distributional outcomes. Section 3 attempts to explain the distributional outcomes in terms of the broader context of the policy framework and the consequential fluctuations of the macroeconomy.
    Note: Includes bibliography
    Language: English
    URL: Volltext  (kostenfrei)
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  • 4
    UID:
    gbv_879555734
    Series Statement: Serie Reformas Económicas 65
    Content: IntroductionThe history of economic policy in Jamaica since World War II, viewed at some distance, reflects the broad sweep of fashion in the history of economic development. The cycles of industrialization by foreign investment, import substitution, populist socialism, and structural adjustment are all present. The most recent phase of that history, that of structural economic reform, has however presented some confusion in the literature on Jamaica. At one extreme, economic reform may be dated from 1977, when Jamaica signed its first Stand By Agreement with the IMF, accompanied by the usual list of conditionalities and their implications for economic reform. Witter and Anderson (1991);, largely using that fact, and Lora (1997);, using a narrow list of indicators, imply that Jamaica is an early reformer. At the other extreme, some key elements of economic reform were not implemented until 1991. Following this vein, Handa and King (1997); suggest that economic reform is a phenomenon of the 1990s.The survey of economic reform below reveals a country drawn reluctantly into the reform era, implementing some aspects of economic reform from the early 1980s, delaying others until the 1990s and ignoring a few elements entirely. Economic liberalism has not caught the popular imagination in Jamaica. The fundamental liberal ideas underlying structural adjustment reform are not popular in Jamaica, and have for the most part been foisted on the people by first, an unwilling administration, and later, by an unfocused one merely following to a limited extent world economic fashion. This unwillingness and lack of commitment will be important in understanding the inconsistency in the reform process as it unfolded in Jamaica.Jamaica represents an interesting case study of economic reform for a number of reasons. First, the various aspects of economic reform occurred during distinct periods. This case stands in contrast to those, such as Chile in the late 1970s, that changed economic policy radically over a relatively short period of time. The Jamaican case, therefore, may be instructive in understanding issues surrounding the timing and sequencing of reform.The other reason why Jamaica presents an important case study is that, amongst reforming economies, it has one of the worst records of economic performance in Latin America and the Caribbean during the era of economic reform. While average growth in the region was 2.2 percent per annum in the 1980s, Jamaica grew at an annual average of only 1.4 percent 1 . In the 1990s, the discrepancy worsened. The economies of Latin American and the Caribbean averaged 3.0 percent per annum from 1991 to 1996, but Jamaica's average growth rate was a mere 1.3 percent. Even within the Caribbean alone, Jamaica's relatively poor performance is manifest. The average growth rate for the period 1980 to 1996 is 3.0, whereas Jamaica managed only 1.4 percent annually over the same period.
    Note: Includes bibliography
    Language: English
    URL: Volltext  (kostenfrei)
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  • 5
    UID:
    gbv_362301727
    Format: 271 S
    Series Statement: Social and economic studies 50.2001,1
    Language: English
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