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008 100820s2010 bl ||||gr |0|| 0 por d
100 1 _aSOARES, Sergei Suarez Dillon
_910148
245 1 0 _aO ritmo na queda da desigualdade no Brasil é aceitável?
260 _aSão Paulo :
_bEditora 34,
_cjul./set. 2010
520 3 _aThe rhythm in the fall of inequality in Brazil is acceptable? Evidences of the historical and international context. The following study uses two approaches to answer the question of whether inequality in Brazil is falling fast enough. The first is to compare the variation of the Gini coefficient in Brazil with what was observed in several countries that today belong to the OCDE (United Kingdom, United States, Netherlands, Sweden, France, Norway, and Spain) while these same countries built their social welfare systems during the last century. The second approach is to calculate for how much Brazil must keep up the fall in the Gini coefficient to attain the same levels of inequality of three OCDE countries that can be used as a reference: Mexico, the United States, and Canada. The data indicate that the Gini coefficient in Brazil is falling 0.7 point per year and that this is superior to the rhythm of all the OCDE countries analyzed while they built their welfare systems but Spain, whose Gini fell 0.9 point per year during the 1950s. The time needed to attain various benchmarks in inequality are: 6 years to Mexico, 12 to the United states and 24 to Canadian inequality levels. The general conclusion is that the speed with which inequality is falling is adequate, but the challenge will be to keep inequality falling at the same rate for another two or three decades
590 _av. 30, n. 3(119)
773 0 8 _tRevista de Economia Política = Brazilian Journal of Political Economy
_g30, 3, p. 364-380
_dSão Paulo : Editora 34, jul./set. 2010
_xISSN 01013157
_w
942 _cS
998 _a20100820
_b1111^b
_cDaiane
998 _a20140306
_b1134^b
_ckarina
999 _aConvertido do Formato PHL
_bPHL2MARC21 1.1
_c35579
_d35579
041 _apor