Inequality in Asia: Trends, Drivers and Policy Implications Juzhong Zhuang Deputy Chief Economist Asian Development Bank Presentation at 215 Hitotsubashi University-IMF Seminar on Inequality, March 12-13, Tokyo Views expressed are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect those of ADB 1 Asia s high growth has led to large reductions in poverty 35 3 25 2 15 1 5 GDP growth and poverty reduction 32.4 7. 37 3.7 9.7 5.7 34 3.4 2.4 1.5 Developing Asia Sub-Saharan Africa Latin America and Middle East and Caribbean North Africa Annual GDP growth (199-21), % Cumulative reduction in poverty rate (199s-2s), percentage point Source: ADB (212) 2
but has been accompanied by rising inequality in many countries Gini coefficient 5. 47.3 48.2 44.4 41.4 4. 37.1 38.1 36.2 36.5 36.4 33.6 34.9 34.2 32.1 3.8 3.4 33.2 32.5 31.2 3.8 29.2 28.9 29.5 3. 27.6 24.5 2. 199s 212 Notes: (a) refers to earliest available data for the 199s and nearest available data for 212; ;(b) Data for Singapore, Taipei,China, Korea, and China are income-based and for other countries are consumption-based. Sources: The World Bank PovCalNet; ADB studies. 3 Income share of the top 1% increased as well % 35 28 21 3.9 27.9 28.8 28.2 26. 24.7 29.7 3. 3. 28.4 27.4 25.8 25. 25.3 23.3 24.1 23.2 27. 14 7 199s 212 Source: The World Bank PovCalNet. 4
Globally, Asia s inequality is lower, but its rise over time is a concern Developing Asia (consumption) Median Gini Maximum Gini 37. 5.9 27.8 OECD 3. 49.6 23. (income) Latin America & Caribbean (income) Middle East & North Africa (consumption) Sub-Saharan Africa (consumption) Source: ADB (212) 52.3 59.5 44.7 36.8 41.4 29.8 42.8 65.8 3. Minimum Gini 5 Why inequality matters? Rising inequality slows down the pace of poverty reduction If inequality had been stable, additional 24 million Asians (6.5% of Asia s population) would have been lifted out of poverty (ADB 212) 2) Inequality can weaken the basis of growth by affecting human capital, social cohesion, middle class, and quality of governance Empirical ii studies show lower inequality is associated with ih longer growth duration. A 1-percentile decrease in inequality increases the expected length of a growth spell by 5% (IMF 211) 6
Drivers of changes in inequality: A simple framework Why inequality has risen in Asia? Technological progress, globalization, and marketoriented reform have led to rapid growth in Asia, but working together they have favored: capital over labor falling share of labor income skilled over unskilled workers rising skill premium Cities/coastal regions over rural/inland areas rising spatial inequality These have been compounded by unequal access to opportunity due to social exclusion. Rising income inequality increases wealth inequality, which in turn contributes to rising income inequality. 8
Share of labor income declined, and of capital income which is more unequal increased Labor Income Share Manufacturing 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 Early 199s Mid-199s Early 2s Mid-2s Source: ADB (212) 9 Skill premium has risen; education inequality accounts for 25 35% of total inequality Share of between-gro oup inequali ty, % 5 4 3 2 1 Income inequality decomposition by educational attainment of household head 44.2 46.2 35.7 29.9 29.8 3.8 26.5 25. 23.2 24.7 2.3 8.1 19 995 2 7 19 993 29- -1 19 99 2 1 PRC India Indonesia Pakistan Philippines Thailand 2 2 2 8 19 994 2 9 19 995 2 5 Source: ADB (212) 1
Spatial inequality urban-rural and inter-province combined accounts for a large share of total t inequality 6 5 Share of spatial inequality (%) 54 4 3 2 13 21 22 26 32 35 38 1 Sri Lanka Philippines Pakistan Indonesia India Viet Nam Bhutan PRC (29) (29) (28) (29) (28) (28) (27) (27) Source: ADB (212) 11 In China, the wealth Gini coefficient doubled during 1988-212 8. 7. 6. 5. 4. 3. 2. 1.. 1988 1995 1999 22 25 26 27 21 212 Source: Li, Wan and Xie (214)
How to respond to rising inequality? Three drivers of growth cannot be hindered Governments can reverse rising i inequality throughh Growth that is more employment friendly to increase the labor income share Interventions to address lagging regions to reduce spatial inequality Public spending to reduce inequality in human capital Fiscal reform to make tax system more progressive Governance reforms to equalize opportunities 13 More broadly, move toward inclusive growth Inclusive growth means everyone can participate in and benefit from growth process on an equitable basis. Inclusive growth makes a distinction between Inequality due to differences in individual efforts, and Inequality due to differences in individual circumstance, or inequality in opportunity. Reducing or eliminating inequality in opportunity is at the heart of an inclusive growth strategy. Inclusive growth is growth coupled with equality of opportunities. pp 14
15 21 Thank you! The presentation is based on Asian Development Outlook 212. For the full report, please visit ADB web site at www.adb.org For more details on inequality in Asia, please read the book Inequality in Asia and the Pacific: Trends, Drivers, and Policy Implications, edited by Ravi Kanbur, Changyong Rhee, and Juzhong Zhuang, published by Routledge in 214. For more details on the concept of inclusive growth, please read the book Poverty, Inequality, and Inclusive Growth in Asia: Measurement, Policy Issues and Country Studies, edited by Juzhong Zhuang, published by Anthem Press in 21 or contact jzhuang@adb.org 16