6. Public Capital and Poverty Traps

2012 ◽  
pp. 174-191
Keyword(s):  
2014 ◽  
Vol 115 (2) ◽  
pp. 103-131 ◽  
Author(s):  
Pierre-Richard Agénor
Keyword(s):  

2013 ◽  
Vol 51 (3) ◽  
pp. 891-894

Explores the different channels through which public capital in infrastructure may affect growth and human welfare and presents a series of formal models for understanding how these channels operate. Discusses basic channels; public capital and education; public capital and health; public capital and innovation; public capital and women's time allocation; public capital and poverty traps; and research perspectives. Agénor is Hallsworth Professor of International Macroeconomics and Development Economics at the University of Manchester and Codirector of the Centre for Growth and Business Cycle Research.


2007 ◽  
Vol 11 (3) ◽  
pp. 318-346
Author(s):  
SANTANU CHATTERJEE

The choice between private and government provision of a productive public good like infrastructure (public capital) is examined in the context of an endogenously growing open economy. The accumulation of public capital need not require government provision, in contrast to the standard assumption in the literature. Even with an efficient government, the relative costs and benefits of government and private provision depend crucially on the economy's underlying structural conditions and borrowing constraints in international capital markets. Countries with limited substitution possibilities and large production externalities may benefit from governments encouraging private provision of public capital through targeted investment subsidies. By contrast, countries with flexible substitution possibilities and relatively smaller externalities may benefit either from governments directly providing public capital or from regulation of private providers. The transitional dynamics also are shown to depend on the underlying elasticity of substitution and the size of the production externality.


Author(s):  
Martin Ravallion ◽  
Jyotsna Jalan
Keyword(s):  

Author(s):  
Aart Kraay ◽  
David McKenzie
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Author(s):  
Rodney Schmidt

This paper synthesizes and develops research undertaken by participants in The North-South Institute project, "Macroeconomic policy choices for growth and poverty reduction" in low- income developing countries.1 The project analysed the features of poverty and growth in seven poor countries of varying circumstances and proposed macroeconomic and growth policies for poverty reduction for them. The research was guided by the question: "How does poverty inform growth strategy?" Our research provides evidence of the channels through which growth and distribution or poverty processes depend on each other and respond to policy together. We encapsulate the messages of these case studies in the following six propositions, discussed at length in the paper: i) macroeconomic stability reduces poverty; ii) land redistribution enhances growth; iii) income poverty traps constrain growth; iv) urban-rural growth disparities drive income inequality; v) regional poverty traps resist growth, and vi) ley growth policies can aggravate poverty gaps.  The propositions suggest growth policies that may be either of two types in terms of impact on growth and distribution. They have the potential to enhance both growth and distribution (win-win) or to enhance growth while aggravating income gaps or vice versa (win-lose).


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