Growth and Inequality: Evidence from Transitional Economies
Oleksiy Ivaschenko
Document: Available from the SSRN Electronic Paper Collection here
ABSTRACT:
The transitional economies of Eastern Europe (EE) and the former
Soviet Union (FSU) experienced a dramatic increase in income inequality in
the 1990s. In this paper I investigate the causes of unprecedented changes
in income distribution using a unique panel of inequality estimates for 24
transitional countries for the period 1989-1998. The fixed effects model is
used to control for unobservable country-specific effects that result in a
missing-variable bias in cross-sectional studies. The relationship between
income inequality, measured by Gini coefficient, and per capita GDP is shown
to be positive for EE, but negative for the FSU. Economic liberalization,
privatization and deindustrialization are found to have contributed to the
rise in income inequality in the transitional region. Hyperinflation also
makes the distribution of income more unequal. I do not find strong support
for unemployment and the size of government consumption affecting income distribution.
While civil conflicts increase income inequality, the extent of political
rights and civil liberties is not found to directly affect income distribution.