Abstract
ABSTRACTWhat was the degree of Brazil's regional inequality in living standards during the first decades of the 20thcentury? This paper presents municipal and state information on wages and prices in order to build welfare ratios for skilled and unskilled workers between 1912 and 1940. Despite the significant differences in nominal wages and costs of living throughout the country, real wage differentials remained lower than those estimated by earlier studies. Williamson (1999) argued that real wages in the Southeast were approximately six times higher than in the Northeast during the 1930s. The new evidence in this paper suggests that wages were on average only 1.5 times higher.
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More From: Revista de Historia Económica / Journal of Iberian and Latin American Economic History
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