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DP5738 Openness, Inequality and Poverty: Endowments Matter

Author(s): Jaime de Melo , Julien Gourdon , Nicolas Maystre
Publication Date: July 2006
Keyword(s): international trade , income distribution , poverty
JEL(s): D3 , F11 , F16
Programme Areas: International Trade and Regional Economics
Link to this Page: www.cepr.org/pubs/dps/DP5738.asp.asp


Using tariffs as a measure of openness, this paper finds consistent evidence that the conditional effects of trade liberalization on inequality are correlated with relative factor endowments. Trade liberalization is associated with increases in inequality in countries well-endowed in highly skilled workers and capital or with workers that have very low education levels, and in countries relatively well-endowed in mining and fuels while it is associated with decreases in inequality in countries that are wellendowed with primary-educated labor. Similar results are also apparent when decile data are used instead of the usual Gini coefficient. The results are strongly supportive of the factor-proportions theory of trade and suggest that trade liberalization in poor countries where the share of the labor force with little education is high raises inequality, although in our sample relative endowments in capital turn out to be the overriding determinant so that trade liberalization is accompanied by reduced income inequality in low-income countries. Simulation results also suggest that relatively small changes in inequality as measured by aggregate measures of inequality like the Gini coefficient are magnified when estimates are carried out using decile data.


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