Abstract
Although there has been a much debate on poverty in Pakistan
in recent time, the discussion on inequality remained limited. Poverty
and inequality are closely linked—for a given mean income, the more
unequal the income distribution, the larger the percentage of the
population living in income poverty. Thus, incomes at the top and in the
middle of the distribution may be just as important to us in perceiving
and measuring poverty as those at the bottom. It is, thus, important to
monitor the whole income distribution rather than merely the bottom of
distribution. The issue of income inequality in Pakistan has been
important in the policy discussions since the early 1960s. Since then, a
number of attempts have been made to estimate the income or expenditure
inequality using the Household Income and Expenditure Survey (HIES)
data. However, a perception of increasing absolute poverty in Pakistan
has shifted the focus of studies from inequality (or relative poverty)
to absolute poverty. Consequently, a number of attempts have been made
by various authors/institutions to estimate the poverty in Pakistan in
the 1990s. The debate on trends in poverty during the 1990s—an era of
stabilisation and structural adjustment has been wide-ranging in
Pakistan. However, there is no discussion on the changes in income
distribution from the policy and institutional reforms. World Bank
(2003); FBS (2001) and Kemal (2003) are only three exceptions. While the
former two studies report Gini Coefficients in their studies on absolute
poverty in Pakistan without explaining its variations over time, the
latter study is a comprehensive review on the income distribution in
Pakistan.
Publisher
Pakistan Institute of Development Economics (PIDE)
Subject
Development,Geography, Planning and Development
Cited by
5 articles.
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