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Working Paper No. 900

When More Poor Means Less Poverty: On Income Inequality and Purchasing Power

Working Paper
Reference
Bergh, Andreas and Therese Nilsson (2012). “When More Poor Means Less Poverty: On Income Inequality and Purchasing Power”. IFN Working Paper No. 900. Stockholm: Research Institute of Industrial Economics (IFN).

Authors
Andreas Bergh, Therese Nilsson

We show theoretically that the poor can benefit from price changes induced by higher income inequality. As the number of poor in a society increases, or when the income difference between rich and poor increases, the market for products aimed towards the poor grows and such products become more profitable. As a result, there are circumstances where an increase in poverty associates with higher purchasing power of the poor. Using cross-country data at two points in time on the price of rice and Big Mac hamburgers, we confirm the relationship between inequality and purchasing power of the poor, and show that it is robust to several control variables and also to a first-difference specification.