Rising income inequality: do not draw the obvious conclusions
Peters, Heiko ; Volwahsen, Maya
Intereconomics. Review of European Economic Policy
2017
52
2
March - April
111-118
economic recovery ; employment ; globalization ; immigration ; technological change ; social inequality
Social sciences
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10272-017-0656-9
English
Bibliogr.
"Inequality is dominating the political debate in various countries still characterised by sluggish economic recovery and high unemployment. The drivers of higher income inequality since 1995 have been globalisation, technological change and migration. At the same time, these factors have had an undeniably positive impact on aggregate income. While populist parties advocate more nationalistic-oriented approaches, we argue that the appropriate policy response to this dilemma is to alleviate the social costs of globalisation rather than rejecting the aggregate economic benefit."
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