feat(script): Add shortened growth and trade liberalisation section
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@ -578,6 +578,97 @@ Summary of main findings for structural policies
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{{< landscape >}}
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{{< landscape >}}
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### Fiscal growth and trade liberalisation
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Complementing their research on institutional labour regulation,
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@Adams2015 explore how business regulation, credit regulation and FDI impact long-term income inequality in developing countries.
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They find a positive correlation between FDI and income inequality,
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arguing for it to be unlikely to generate positive welfare effects in developing countries primarily through bad targeting,
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while business regulations show more mixed outcomes.[^adams-targeting-fdi]
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However, as with their results for labour regulation,
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the regional focus of the results makes it hard to disaggregate individual causes for individual national contexts.
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[^adams-targeting-fdi]: The primary channel, they argue, is FDI often operating on the wrong targeting incentive structure. It would only be able to generate more equity when correctly targeting the creation of rooted connections from the local economy to surrounding economies instead of moving capital directly to surrounding economies.
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@Liyanaarachchi2016 investigate the effects of trade liberalisation on income inequality and absolute poverty in Sri Lanka, using a simulation model.
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They find complete elimination of tariffs resulting in absolute poverty reduction,
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with tariff elimination combined with resulting fiscal policy responses for budget balancing having more mixed effects but still an absolute reduction in poverty.
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Income inequality, however, sees short-term increases in most sectors and in all sectors over the long term.
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The study identifies rising wage differences,
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especially increases for managers, professionals and technicians,
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as well as widening gaps between urban workers,
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while low-income households become more dependent on private or government transfers that do not increase with the liberalisation.
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@Xu2021 look at both trade liberalisation and FDI effects in 38 sub-Saharan countries,
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finding a negative correlation between FDI and income inequality,
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with positive relationships instead found with trade liberalisation, corruption level, political stability and rule of law and education.
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The contradicting findings to @Adams2015 and @Liyanaarachchi2016 might arise due to differences in sample, variables used or the different periods under study.[^xu-adams-contradictions]
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They identify income inequality reductions through FDI benefiting the agricultural sector,
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primarily employing low-skilled labour,
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while trade liberalisation instead creates jobs in other countries through higher import than export rates.
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[^xu-adams-contradictions]: While both use a generalized method of moments approach utilizing the Gini indicator and an analysis on the regional level, the latter includes a broader range of independent domestic structural variables.
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Additionally, while @Adams2015 study long-term processes from 1970 to 2012, @Xu2021 use panel data from 2000 to 2015 restricted to sub-Saharan countries, which may account for some of the differences.
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@Khan2021 paint a more nuanced picture for trade liberalisation effects in a simulation study on free trade agreements (FTAs) in Pakistan,
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with some trade agreements related negatively to income inequality and others positively,
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for large-scale, regional and bilateral agreements.
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Impacts are more dependent on micro-economic factors:
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The authors identify grain and livestock as the primary channels through which trade agreements affect income inequality,
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as these are the predominant sources of income for poor rural households.
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Farm-worker incomes generally increase if trade agreements increase grain or livestock exports,
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leading to more equitable distribution,
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while inequality increases instead if this does not happen.[^khan-notes]
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While most of these changes are obscured short-term by greater mobility with more even distribution across regions and households,
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in the long term the study finds more equitable distribution if agricultural growth can be sustained.
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[^khan-notes]: Additionally, the authors identify some wage compression effects between urban and rural households, with richer urban households often decreasing service and processed food production in this case. Generalizability may also be limited due to this strong focus on production factor reallocations within the context of rural Pakistan.
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@Rendall2013 focus on the impacts of structural changes in Brazil, Mexico, Thailand and India 1987 to 2008,
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especially on female labour market participation and the gender wage gap.
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The results are quite divergent, with India having largely stable participation inequality,
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mixed results in Mexico and Thailand and Brazil a stronger change towards equity similar to that of the US,
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identifying the move from mostly physical labour to more service-oriented economies as primary driver.[^rendall-brain-brawn]
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Female wage gap fell most rapidly in Brazil, though widening again since 2005,
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widening in Mexico during the 1990s, closing again more recently,
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and produced more mixed results in Thailand and India.
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The authors argue this disconnect between participation and wage shows the impacts of contextually different structural labour market changes:
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a quick rise in less physically-oriented occupations in Brazil,
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the introduction of a feminised manufacturing sector Mexico in the 1990s,
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and more subsistence-oriented labour markets with diverging skill structures in Thailand and India.
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[^rendall-brain-brawn]: They use a framework which they term 'brawn' (physical labour) to 'brain' (less physically demanding labour, such as office work and service economy). The concept sees capital displacing brawn in production for transition economies which they find confirmed in all countries, though to different extents.
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As with the study's results for wage gap fluctuations, there are a variety of mediating factors at play in each context, some of which may be unidentified.
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@Wang2020 in turn use a simulation to focus on the spatial income inequality effects of terminating subsidies for the agricultural grain sectors in China.
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They see the removal leading to gradual improvements in the industrial economic infrastructure,
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though a short-term rural-urban income inequality increase is observed.
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Long-term the decreases in real wages for rural workers would alleviate,
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increasing the rural income ratio, though with a gap that would remain incompletely closed.[^wang-channels]
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Thus, the authors identify a trade-off between improvements to the national economic output,
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benefited by the removal,
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and rural-urban income disparity,
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benefiting instead more from the subsidies, especially short-term.
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[^wang-channels]: Especially for the short-term increase, but also the remaining inequality gap, the study sees the displacement of rural unskilled labour resulting in increased supply of unskilled labour which is challenging to absorb into manufacturing or service sectors as slowing down the process,
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in addition to low price elasticity of agricultural products contributing to an overall decline of rural incomes.
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Thereby the study strongly binds its findings to the structural economic characteristics of the Chinese labour market and its results only hold for the assumption of static national employment.
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Finally, @Go2010 model the effects of a wage subsidy targeted at employers of low- and medium-skilled workers on poverty and income inequality in South Africa.
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They find overall income inequality significantly reduced by 0.5 percentage points through an income redistribution due to an increase in formal employment for low- and medium-skilled workers,
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as the subsidy works as an incentive for new job creations.
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An equally significant 1.6 percent of households move out of poverty using an absolute poverty headcount ratio,
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which equally holds for both urban and rural spaces,
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through the targeting being most beneficial for the poorest households through greater income gains and more households being affected.[^go-limits]
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[^go-limits]: This approach also restricts the study somewhat by being unable to account for exogenous shocks or remaining unobservables and prior assumptions binding it more closely to the structure of the South African labour market.
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The prevalence of equilibrium modelling simulations may exacerbate several limitations:
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A heavy reliance on initial assumptions for results to hold makes these studies susceptible to overlooking exogenous factors or shocks to the system and struggle to accurately represent long-term dynamics.
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Additionally, they often fail to account for the practical challenges to policy implementations through institutional frameworks or political contexts,
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Recognizing such shortcomings is crucial when assessing the reliability and applicability of their findings,
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as will be discussed in considering study robustness.
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## Agency factors
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## Agency factors
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# Robustness of evidence
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# Robustness of evidence
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