Unbundling the effect of political instability on income redistribution

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Unbundling the effect of political instability on income redistribution. / Vu, Trung V.
In: European Journal of Political Economy, Vol. 75, 102189, 12.2022.

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Vu, T. V. (2022). Unbundling the effect of political instability on income redistribution. European Journal of Political Economy, 75, Article 102189. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ejpoleco.2022.102189

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Vu TV. Unbundling the effect of political instability on income redistribution. European Journal of Political Economy. 2022 Dec;75:102189. Epub 2022 Feb 2. doi: 10.1016/j.ejpoleco.2022.102189

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Vu, Trung V. / Unbundling the effect of political instability on income redistribution. In: European Journal of Political Economy. 2022 ; Vol. 75.

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Unbundling the effect of political instability on income redistribution

AU - Vu, Trung V.

PY - 2022/12

Y1 - 2022/12

N2 - The main objective of this study is to investigate potential political barriers to fostering an egalitarian redistribution of income within an economy. It empirically establishes that countries characterized by the prevalence of political instability are less likely to adopt progressive income redistribution. Employing data for up to 143 countries between 1996 and 2015, I consistently find evidence that political instability has a negative impact on effective fiscal redistribution, captured by the difference between market and net income inequality. Further analyses indicate that the economic and statistical significance of the redistributive impact of political instability is stronger in non-democratic and highly diverse societies, and low-income economies. Hence, the detrimental effect of political uncertainty on effective fiscal redistribution appears to hold only in non-democratic, fragmented and low-income countries. The findings imply that reducing political instability contributes to establishing an egalitarian redistribution of income, potentially leading to less income inequality.

AB - The main objective of this study is to investigate potential political barriers to fostering an egalitarian redistribution of income within an economy. It empirically establishes that countries characterized by the prevalence of political instability are less likely to adopt progressive income redistribution. Employing data for up to 143 countries between 1996 and 2015, I consistently find evidence that political instability has a negative impact on effective fiscal redistribution, captured by the difference between market and net income inequality. Further analyses indicate that the economic and statistical significance of the redistributive impact of political instability is stronger in non-democratic and highly diverse societies, and low-income economies. Hence, the detrimental effect of political uncertainty on effective fiscal redistribution appears to hold only in non-democratic, fragmented and low-income countries. The findings imply that reducing political instability contributes to establishing an egalitarian redistribution of income, potentially leading to less income inequality.

U2 - 10.1016/j.ejpoleco.2022.102189

DO - 10.1016/j.ejpoleco.2022.102189

M3 - Article

VL - 75

JO - European Journal of Political Economy

JF - European Journal of Political Economy

SN - 0176-2680

M1 - 102189

ER -