Author/Editor:

Adrian Peralta-Alva ; Bin Grace Li ; Davide Furceri ; Futoshi Narita ; Marina Mendes Tavares ; Rodrigo Garcia-Verdu ; Sandra V Lizarazo Ruiz ; Stefania Fabrizio

Publication Date:

January 26, 2017

Electronic Access:

Free Full text(PDF file size is 1448 KB).Use the free Adobe Acrobat Reader to view this PDF file

Summary:

Despite sustained economic growth and rapid poverty reductions, income inequality remains stubbornly high in many low-income developing countries. This pattern is a concern as high levels of inequality can impair the sustainability of growth and macroeconomic stability, thereby also limiting countries' ability to reach the Sustainable Development Goals. This underscores the importance of understanding how policies aimed at boosting economic growth affect income inequality. Using empirical and modeling techniques, the note confirms that macro-structural policies aimed at raising growth payoffs in low-income developing countries can have important distributional consequences, with the impact dependent on both the design of reforms and on country-specific economic characteristics. While there is no one-size-fits-all recipe, the note explores how governments can address adverse distributional consequences of reforms by designing reform packages to make pro-growth policies also more inclusive.

IMF - International Monetary Fund published this content on 26 January 2017 and is solely responsible for the information contained herein.
Distributed by Public, unedited and unaltered, on 26 January 2017 14:58:09 UTC.

Original documenthttp://www.imf.org/en/Publications/Staff-Discussion-Notes/Issues/2017/01/26/Macro-Structural-Policies-and-Income-Inequality-in-Low-Income-Developing-Countries-44526

Public permalinkhttp://www.publicnow.com/view/ECE87FF77BC20DC60FAFD699B63633AC8E40129C