A more equitable distribution of income may help accelerate growth and promoteeconomic development. Equitable doesn’t mean equal distribution of income. It refers to the distribution of income that is ‘fair,’ but the concept of ‘fair’ is subjective. Distribution of wealth and income is the ...
Growth and distribution: the case of Mozambique Large state farms, medium sized communal villages, and small subsistence plots must be planned in a coordinated fashion so that economic growth is not achieved at the expense of equitable distribution of income. In trying to eliminate ... RK Srivast...
is expected to have positive impact on economic growth, improve income distribution, andsreduce poverty.sIn late eighties and during nineties, Pakistan li... AR Khan - Pakistan Institute of Development Economics 被引量: 13发表: 1997年 Global...
At a time when the global food system faces multiple and interlocking challenges, examining the business arrangements and structures that can lead to a more equitable distribution of value in food supply chains has never been more important. Through 12 case studies, this paper demonstrates the range...
Additionally, it entails determining the financial standing of the facilities, and their distribution in communities [9, 27]. This estimation helps to understand how well governments distribute their finite resources to address the necessities of the underprivileged [9, 27, 28]. Of late, BIA is ...
To make it clearer, the WTM works differently of what happens in the normalization step adopted in the framework of the well-known Human Development Index, where the minimum and the maximum are fixed to $100 and $75,000, respectively, even if $100 is not the minimum of the distribution ...
Human Capital and the Urban and Structural Transformation of Countries We calibrate the model to match some of the salient patterns of structural transformation (sectoral TFP and allocation of labor), urban development (migration, urbanization) and income distribution observed in Brazil since 1960. We...
This chapter begins with a brief comparison of Buddhist economics with the mainstream free market (or neoliberal) approach. Free market economics sees average income as the goal, and income distribution and environmental degradation are left to the marketplace to determine. Buddhist economics guides ...
Air quality associated public health co-benefit may emerge from climate and energy policies aimed at reducing greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions. However, the distribution of these co-benefits has not been carefully studied, despite the opportunity to tailor
account for potential inequalities among the beneficiary groups in the baseline. Therefore, the analysis can provide useful information regarding potential “winners and losers” under different development scenarios, but not regarding ‘ideal’ (e.g., equitable) distribution of ES across the study ...