POVERTY, INEQUALITY & GLOBALIZATION

Resources for Researchers

Research on poverty, inequality and globalization in developing countries may be categorized under the following headings.


General and Conceptual Discussions of Poverty, Inequality & Globalization


•Aisbett, E. (2004) Why are Critics So Convinced that Globalization is Bad for the Poor?  Forthcoming in Globalization and Poverty, edited by Ann Harrison, National Bureau of Economic Research, Cambridge, Mass.  Previously entitled Globaization, Poverty and Inequality: are the criticims vague, vested, or valid?

•Aisbett, E. (2003) Globalization, Poverty and Inequality: are the criticisms vague, vested, or valid?  Prepared for the NBER Pre-conference on Globalization, Poverty and Inequality, October 24-25, 2003. Link to E. Aisbett's References.

•Bardhan, P. (2003) Globalization and the Limits to Poverty Alleviation, draft.

•Bhagwati, J. (forthcoming book chapter) “Poverty: Enhanced or Diminished?”

•Bhagwati, J. & T.N. Srinivasan (2002) Trade and Poverty in the Poor Countries.  AEA Papers and Proceedings 92(2): 180-183.

•Bourguignon, F. and C. Morrison (2002) Inequality Among World Citizens, 1820-1992, American Economics Review, 92 (September 2002): 727-744.

•Centre of Economic Policy Research (CEPR) and Department for International Development  (2002) Trade Liberalization and Poverty: a Handbook.  London, U.K.

•Deardorff, A.V. (2002), What Might Globalization Critics Believe?. RSIE Discussion Paper 492.

•Elliott, K.A., D. Kar  & J.D. Richardson  (2002) Assessing Globalization Critics: "talkers are no good doers???" 

•Feldstein, Martin (2003) “Overview” Presented at Federal Reserve Conference Income Inequality: Issues and Policy Options.

•Kanbur, R. (2001), Economic Policy, Distribution and Poverty: The Nature of the Disagreements. World Development, 29(6), 1083-94.

•Milanovic, Branko (2002) True World Income Distribution, 1988 and 1993: First calculation based on households surveys alone, The Economnic Journal, 112: 51-92.

•Milanovic, Branko (2003) The Two Faces of Globalization: Against Globalization as We Know it, World Development, Vol. 4, No. 4, pp 667-683.

•Milanovic, Branko (2003) Why we all do care about inequality (but are loath to admit it). Unpublished Draft as of October 8th, 2003.

•Ravallion, M. (2003) The Debate on Globalization, Poverty and Inequality: Why Measurement Matters. World Bank Development Research Group Working Paper 3038.

•Reimer, J.J. (2002) Estimating the Poverty Impacts of Trade Liberalization. Global Trade Analysis Project (GTAP) Working Paper No. 20.

•Sen, A. (2002) Globalization and Poverty.  Transcript of lecture given at Santa Clara University 29 October 2002.

•Winters, L.A. (2000) Trade, Trade Policy and Poverty: what are the links? Center for Economic Policy Research (CEPR) Research Paper No. 2382.


Measuring Poverty and Inequality


• Deaton, A. (2002) Is World Poverty Falling, Finance and Development: A Quarterly Magazine of the IMF, Vol 39(2).

•Deaton, A. (2003) Measuring Inequality in a Growing World.  

•Dowrick D., M. Akmal (2003) Contradictory trends in global income inequality: a tale of two biases, mimeo, May 2003.

•Galbraith J., W. A. Darity & L. Jiaqing (1998)  Measuring the Evolution of Inequality in the Global Economy.  Center for Economic Policy Analysis, Working Paper No. 4.

•Galbraith J., Conceicao P. & H. Kum (2000) Inequality and Growth Reconsidered Once Again: Some New Evidence from Old  Data.  UTIP Working Paper No. 17.

•Graham, C. (2001) Stemming the Backlash Against Globalisation.  Brookings Policy Brief No. 78. This paper looks at the perceptions of upward mobility of people in developing countries as a way of understanding why globalization is not as popular as economists expect it to be.

• Milanovic, B.  (2002) True World Income Distribution, 1988 and 1993:  First Calculation Based on Household Surveys Alone.  
    The Economic Journal, 112, January.

•Ravallion, M. (2001) Growth, Inequality and Poverty: Looking Beyond Averages, World Bank Research Working Paper.

•Ravallion, M. (2003) The Debate on Globalization, Poverty and Inequality: Why Measurement Matters. World Bank Development Research             Group Working Paper 3038.

•Reddy, S.J. & Pogge, T.W. (2003) How Not to Count the Poor. Transcript of lecture given at Columbia University, New York, March.

• The World Bank Group (2002) Poverty Reduction Strategy Handbook: Poverty Measurement and Analysis.


Cross-Country Evidence on Poverty, Inequality & Globalization

•Agenor, P.R. (2002) Does Globalisation Hurt the Poor? World Bank Development Research Group Working Paper 2922.

•Baldwin, R. Openness and Growth: what's the empirical relationship.  Though not specifically addressing poverty, this is a good and very up to date survey paper of the wider literature on openness and growth.

•Berg, A. and A. Kruger (2003) Trade, Growth and Poverty: a selective survey.  IMF Working Paper, WP/03/30.

•Dimaranan, B., Hertel, T. & Keeney, R. (2003) OECD Domestic Support and Developing Countries, UNU/WIDER Discussion Paper No. 2003/32

•Dollar, D. & A. Kraay (2001) Trade, Growth and Poverty, World Bank Development Research Group Working Paper 2615.

•Easterly, W. (2001) IMF and World Banck Structural Adjustment Programs and Poverty, Papers 2517, World Bank - Country Economics Department

•Easterly, W. (2001) The Lost Decades: Developing Countries' Stagnation in Spite of Policy Reform 1980-1998, Journal of Economic Growth, Volume 6, Issue 2, June 2001, 135-157.

• Milanovic, B. (2003) The Two Faces of Globalization: Against Globalization As We Know It, World Development Vol.31, No. 4, pp. 667-683.

•Rodrik, Dani (2000), Comments on 'Trade, Growth and Poverty by D. Dollar & A. Kraay", mimeo, October 2000.

•Rodriguez F., Rodrik D., Hseh C.T., Jones C.I. (2001), Trade Policy and Economic Growth: a skeptics guide to the cross-national evidence, NBER Macroeconomics Annual 2000 15: 261-+ 2001.

•Sala-i-martin, X.  The Disturbing ‘Rise’ of Global Income Inequality, NBER Working Paper 8904, April 2002.


Micro Studies and Single Country Studies

•Anderson, K. (2003) Trade Liberalization, Agriculture and Poverty in Low Income Countries, UNU/WIDER Discussion Paper No. 2003/25

•Chen, S. & M. Ravallion (2003) Household Welfare Impacts of China’s Accession to the World Trade Organization.  World Bank Research Working Paper No. 3040.

•Deaton, A. & A. Tarozzi (2000) Prices and Poverty in India,  RPDS Working Paper 196.

•Deaton, A. & J. Dreze (2002) Poverty and Inequality in India: a reexamination.  Economic and Political Weekly, September 7, 2002: 3729-2748.

•DeJanvry, A., E. Sadoulet & G. Deanda (1995) NAFTA and Mexico Maize Producers. World Development, 23(8): 1349-1362.

•Duncan, T,  et al. (2003) Education in a Crisis,  forthcoming JDE.

•Friedman, J. & J. Levinson (2002) The Distributional Impacts of Indonesia's Financial Crisis on Household Welfare: A "Rapid Response" Methodology,  World Bank Economic Review 16 (3): 397-423.

•Porto, G. (2003) Using Survey Data to Assess the Distributional Effects of Trade Policy.  

•Ravallion, M. (2000) “Prices, Wages and Poverty in Rural India: what lessons do the time series data hold for policy?” Food Policy 25:351-364.


Websites on Poverty, Inequality and Globalization

The World Bank Group PovertyNet Homepage.  A great place to start. Has a good new link to poverty data sources.

The World Bank Group Inequality Around the World.  Includes discussion of definitions and debate over inequality, as well as links to data.

The World Bank Group Poverty and Trade Research.  Has links to recent papers and data.

The World Bank Group Poverty and Rural Development.  This is a more policy oriented site, with links to some relevant documents, including “Trade Policy Reform and Poverty Alleviation."

United Nations Conference on Trade and Development, Geneva, (UNCTAD).


Websites with Data on Poverty and Globalization

The World Bank Group Data & Statistics. Extensive website of World Bank Data including World Development Indicators. The Data by Country and Data by Topic pages also have good links to other sources of data.

The World Bank Group Inequality Around the World - Data Page.

Development Gateway.  Extensive set of links, possibly all you could every want.

The World Bank Group Research Datasets. Datasets used for World Bank Working Papers and other publications.

World Trade Organization Trade Statistics     

UNDP World Income Inequality    

University of Texas Inequality Project (UTIP).  Galbraith's data sets on inequality based on industrial pay rates.

UNICEF Progress for Children.  Includes child survival and health, water and sanitation, education and maternal health.

United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD) Statistics: Overview.  Price, Trade and Trade Barrier Data available through their statistical databases.

Food and Agriculture Organization Statistics.  Agriculture, Fisheries & Nutrition data.
 

Academic Sites and Research Centers

National Bureau of Economic Research International Trade and Investment Archive.


Global Trade Analysis Project Purdue.  GTAP produces a publicly available and regularly updated data set and CGE model tailored for the analysis of trade policy changes.

Global Trade Negotiations Homepage.  Centered for International Development: Harvard

Globalization and Poverty.  Globalization and Poverty (GAP) Research is a UK government funded project.

University of Texas Inequality Project UTIP.

Angus Deaton's Homepage Poverty in the World and in India.

Institute for International Economics Globalization Page.  


"Anti-Globalization" Websites/Books


Korten, D.C. “When Corporations Rule the World”, 2nd ed. Berrett-Khoeler, San Francisco.
Widely acknowledged as the Bible of globalization's dissenters. Korten is equally suspicious of both big government and big corporations. He is strongly in favor of both democracy and markets, but argues that democracy only works well at the local level, and markets need government regulation.

Trade Observatory Website (formerly known as WTO watch). Centered on trade agreements and institutions, but a high quality website.

Oxfam International. Oxfam has a very broad range of interests, but it produces some of the best quality and most balanced critiques of the current global trading system. Searchable website of their statements and publications. See in particular “Rigged Rules and Double Standards: trade, globalisation and the fight against poverty.”

ATTAC.  ATTAC is a very international network of academics and intellectuals, the website includes searchable archive of their newsletters.

Project for the First People's Century.  Rojas is an academic and consultant. His website contains an impressive set of links to papers, publications, data sources, and other relevant websites.  


Websites for Past Seminars and Conferences


PREM Learning Week: Trade, Poverty, and Empowerment: A Question of Perspective? (June 18, 2002). 

World Bank Development Forum: Globalization, Development and Poverty. Online discussion (May 11, 2000).

Cornell Conference on Globalization, Agricultural Development and Rural Livelihoods (April 11, 2003).    

WIDER Conference on Inequality, Poverty and Human Wellbeing (30 May, 2003).




comments & suggestions:  lazo@are.berkeley.edu
last edited 7th October 2003