160 likes | 438 Views
Finance, Inequality and Poverty: Cross-Country Evidence. Thorsten Beck, Asli Demirguc-Kunt and Ross Levine. Motivation. High levels of income inequality and poverty around the world In 2001, 1.1 billion lived on less than one dollar a day
E N D
Finance, Inequality and Poverty: Cross-Country Evidence Thorsten Beck, Asli Demirguc-Kunt and Ross Levine
Motivation • High levels of income inequality and poverty around the world • In 2001, 1.1 billion lived on less than one dollar a day • In Thailand, poverty dropped by 90% from 1981 to 2000, while it doubled in Venezuela • While growth helps reduce poverty, it is not enough! • Growth-enhancing policies can have distributional effects: • Raise everyone’s income • Raise primarily incomes of the rich • Raise primarily incomes of the poor
Motivation • Negative relationship between inequality and growth often explained with financial market constraints; suggesting redistributive policies • Alternative: financial sector reform that reduces market frictions, lowers income inequality and boosts growth without incentive problems of redistributive policies
Our Contribution • Finance is pro-(average) growth … • … but is it also pro-poor? ... Does it boost the growth of the poor more than growth of the average person? • Using a cross-country regressions, we analyze the effect of financial development on: • Income growth of the poor • Changes in income inequality • Changes in Headcount
Finance – pro-rich or pro-poor? • Pro-poor • Credit constraints are particularly binding for the poor (Banerjee and Newman,1993; Galor and Zeira, 1993; Aghion and Bolton, 1997) • Finance helps overcome barriers of indivisible investment (McKinnon, 1973) • Finance foster economy-wide openness and competition by facilitating entry (Rajan and Zingales, 2003) • Pro-rich: • Credit is channeled to incumbent and connected and not to entrepreneurs with best opportunities (Lamoreaux, 1986; Haber, 1991)
Data – Financial development • Private Credit • Value of credit by financial intermediaries to the private sector divided by GDP • Data averaged over 1960-99 (1980-2000) • Countries with higher levels of Private Credit grow faster • Beck, Levine and Loayza (2000)
Data – Dependent variables • Average annual growth rate of the real income of lowest income quintile over 1960-99 for 52 countries • Average annual growth rate of Gini coefficient over 1960-99 for 52 countries • Average annual growth rate in Headcount (share of population with less than $1 a day) over 1980-2000 for 58 countries
Methodology Finance and income growth of the poor Finance and changes in income inequality Finance and poverty alleviation
Finance and the Poor – the economic effect • Income of the poor in Brazil would have grown 4% instead of 0% per year over the period 1960-99, had Brazil had the same level of Private Credit as Korea
Finance and Poverty Alleviation – the economic effect • Headcount in Peru would have increased only by 5% instead of the actual 19% per year, had it had the level of financial development of Chile; this would have resulted in a Headcount of 2% in 2000 rather than the actual 15%.
Robustness tests Results hold controlling for: • Trade Openness • Inflation • Schooling 1960 • Age dependency ratio • Population growth
Simultaneity Bias • Control for reverse causation and simultaneity bias by instrumenting for Private Credit • Legal origin • Latitude • Religion • Tests: • Test of overidentifying restrictions • F-test and adjusted R-squared for first stage
Conclusions • Finance is pro-growth and pro-poor! • In countries with better developed financial intermediaries, • income of the poor grows faster • income inequality decreases at faster rate • poverty falls at faster rate • How to foster financial intermediary development? • How to broaden access to financial services?