Abstract

Over the last decades, Latin American countries have experienced a noticeable decrease in income inequality. While this trend is mainly associated with a decline in wage inequality, progressive reforms of the tax-benefit systems of the region may have played a role. While redistributive systems in Latin America are still in their infancy, they are constantly expanding and do so at different pace in the region. To investigate this point in a comparative way, the present study exploits newly developed tax-benefit microsimulation models for Ecuador and Colombia. These two neighboring countries show contrasted situations in terms of income distribution and we characterize the extent to which this difference is explained by different tax-benefit systems. The comparative nature of our microsimulation models allows us to swap tax-benefit systems between countries to produce counterfactual simulations whereby the system of a country is applied to the population of the other. In this way, we can decompose the total country difference in income distribution to extract the role of different tax-benefit policies. We confirm that the Ecuadorean system is more redistributive and quantify the difference: if the Ecuadorean system was applied to the Colombian population, the Gini coefficient would be reduced by 1.7 points in Colombia. Headcount poverty would decrease by around 10% and the intensity of poverty by up to 14.7%. This analysis contributes to the recent literature on the redistributive role of tax-benefit systems in Latin America and highlights the role of microsimulation techniques to show how countries in the region can learn from each other in order to improve social protection and reduce income inequality.

Highlights

  • During the last decade, Latin America has experienced an important decrease in household income inequality (Lustig et al 2013; Alvaredo and Gasparini 2015)

  • According to data from the Socio-Economic Database for Latin America and the Caribbean (SEDLAC), the Gini coefficient of household income per capita in Ecuador fell from 53.6% in 2004 to 45.2% in 2014.10 Over the same period, Ecuador experienced an important decrease in poverty, with the absolute poverty headcount falling from 48.0% in 2004 to 23.6% in 2014.11

  • In the case the Ecuadorean system would be applied to Colombia, the marginal contribution of social assistance benefits to elderly poverty reduction would increase substantially from 2.9 to 7.3 points, because of the more generous benefit amount of the Human Development Transfer from Ecuador for old-age individuals not covered by social security

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Latin America has experienced an important decrease in household income inequality (Lustig et al 2013; Alvaredo and Gasparini 2015). They are developed as a multi-country microsimulation embedded in the modeling structure of EUROMOD This means that every redistributive instrument is defined according to the same core calculation and definition, using similar data treatment for source income and household characteristics, guaranteeing a harmonized framework for international comparisons (see Sutherland and Figari 2013).. This means that every redistributive instrument is defined according to the same core calculation and definition, using similar data treatment for source income and household characteristics, guaranteeing a harmonized framework for international comparisons (see Sutherland and Figari 2013).7 Armed with this tool, we assess the distributional effects of the Ecuadorean and Colombian tax-benefit systems by “swapping” tax-benefit rules between the two countries.

Tax-benefit systems and income redistribution in Latin America
Statistics in a comparative perspective
Related literature
Methodology
Data and simulations
Decomposition
Empirical results
Relative size of tax-benefit components
Decomposition results
Marginal contributions of tax-benefit components
Findings
Conclusions
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call