Redistributive policies, social integration and productivity: an exploration
Metadatos:
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor/es:
Sanguinetti, Pablo
Heymann, Daniel
Fecha:
1994Resumen
The economic conditions of the poor segments of a population
can be improved through government transfers or through increases
in the market income of the individuals in the relevant groups.
Both effects may interact. A common argument, found both in
informal discussions and in the recent literature on economic
development, is that the level of individual productivity depends
on that of the community where the agent lives and performs
activities. It would follow that "social integration", in the sense
of dense contacts between people with different labor incomes,
tends to create positive externalities for the relatively poor.
Some of these externalities could be attributed to informal
learning, either in the workplace or in the place of residence; in
addition, a certain homogeneity in behavior patterns (which can be
expected to associate with less "segregated" neighborhoods) is
likely to reduce transaction costs overall. If these effects are
present, redistributive policies which modify the spatial
composition of the population --or otherwise change the strength of
the interaction between groups--may influence the productivity of
the target sectors, and their ability to escape "poverty traps".