The Devil is in the Detail : Growth, Inequality and Poverty Reduction in Africa in the Last Two Decades

The present paper, starting from evidence of low growth-to-poverty elasticity characterizing Africa, purports to identify the distributional changes that limited the pro-poor impact of the last two decades’ growth. Distributional changes that went undetected by standard inequality measures were not...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Clementi, Fabio, Fabiani, Michele, Molini, Vasco
Format: Journal Article
Published: Oxford University Press 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10986/33206
Description
Summary:The present paper, starting from evidence of low growth-to-poverty elasticity characterizing Africa, purports to identify the distributional changes that limited the pro-poor impact of the last two decades’ growth. Distributional changes that went undetected by standard inequality measures were not showing a clear pattern of inequality on the continent. By applying a new decomposition technique based on a non-parametric method—the ‘relative distribution’—we found a clear distributional pattern affecting almost all analysed countries. Nineteen out twenty four countries experienced a significant increase in polarization, particularly in the lower tail of the distribution, and this distributional change lowered the pro-poor impact of growth substantially. Without this unfavorable redistribution, poverty could have decreased in these countries by an additional five percentage points.