Tendencias en desigualdad de ingreso y consumo en Bolivia: un cuento de hadas de gigantes empequeñeciendo y enanos en crecimiento
Abstract
Este trabajo documenta y describe la evolución de la desigualdad de ingreso y de consumo en Bolivia entre 1999 y 2011. Hemos podido encontrar que la desigualdad tanto en ingreso como en consumo, medida por el índice de Gini, cayó en 22% durante el periodo de análisis, convirtiendo a Bolivia en el país mas destacado de América Latina en lo que respecta a reducción de la desigualdad. Para hacer una descripción más completa de esta tendencia, hacemos análisis separados para el área urbana y para el área rural. Los cambios en la desigualdad urbana son conducidos por cambios en la parte mas alta de la distribución, tal que las ratios percentiles 90-50 de ingreso y de consumo cayeron 24%, en contra a una caída de 8% en la ratio 50-10, para el subperiodo 2005-2011. Los cambios en desigualdad rural ocurren a través de toda la distribución de un modo similar, pero son más intensos antes de 2005, cuando las ratios 90-50 y 50-10 cayeron 30 y 26% respectivamente.
This paper documents and describes the evolution of income and consumption inequality in Bolivia between 1999 and 2011. We find that income and consumption inequality measured by the Gini index both dropped 22% during the period we analyze, making Bolivia the top performer in the Latin American region regarding income inequality reduction. To make a more complete description of this trend, we make separate analysis for the urban and rural area. Changes in urban inequality are driven by changes in the upper part of the distribution, as the 90-50 income and consumption percentile ratios fell 24%, as opposed to a 8% fall in the 50-10 ratio, for the subperiod 2005-2011. Changes in rural inequality occur through the entire distribution in similar fashion, but are more intense before 2005, when the 90-50 and 50-10 ratios fell 30 and 26% respectively.
This paper documents and describes the evolution of income and consumption inequality in Bolivia between 1999 and 2011. We find that income and consumption inequality measured by the Gini index both dropped 22% during the period we analyze, making Bolivia the top performer in the Latin American region regarding income inequality reduction. To make a more complete description of this trend, we make separate analysis for the urban and rural area. Changes in urban inequality are driven by changes in the upper part of the distribution, as the 90-50 income and consumption percentile ratios fell 24%, as opposed to a 8% fall in the 50-10 ratio, for the subperiod 2005-2011. Changes in rural inequality occur through the entire distribution in similar fashion, but are more intense before 2005, when the 90-50 and 50-10 ratios fell 30 and 26% respectively.
Description
No. 20