Is Rising Income Inequality Far from Inevitable During Structural Transformation? A Proposal for an Augmented Inequality Dynamics
Journal of Economics and Political Economy, Volume 4, Issue 3, pp. 224-237, 2017
14 Pages Posted: 3 May 2017 Last revised: 31 Jan 2018
Date Written: May 3, 2017
Abstract
This paper examines whether rising income inequality is the stylised fact for the process of structural transformation by revisiting classical accounts on the transformation-inequality nexus, with a particular focus on Kuznets’s and Rostow’s theories of development and Rawls’s difference principle. In addition, a complex interaction between structural transformation and income inequality is analysed by exploring the multi-dimensions of inequality dynamics to link Kuznets-Rostow-Rawls. This critical review allows us to conclude that rising income inequality is far from inevitable by introducing a proposal for what it calls ‘augmented inequality dynamics’ which attempts to systematize circulating societal processes through social, economic, political and moral dimensions. This explains how income inequality is used to incentivise or restrain the process of various societal interactions by itself going up and down repeatedly in the context of structural transformation.
Keywords: Economic inequality, Structural transformation, Kuznets curve, Rostow's stages of economic growth, Rawls's difference principle
JEL Classification: D63, L15, O10
Suggested Citation: Suggested Citation