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Unpacking inequalities in Europe and Central Asia Ben Slay, UNDP senior advisor 8 May 2015
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Unpacking Inequalities in Europe and Central Asia

Apr 21, 2017

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Page 1: Unpacking Inequalities in Europe and Central Asia

Unpacking inequalities in Europe and Central Asia

Ben Slay, UNDP senior advisor

8 May 2015

Page 2: Unpacking Inequalities in Europe and Central Asia

Global inequality discourse: Two dominant threads

• “Northern”: OECD countries (Picketty, Stiglitz)– Impact of trade, financial globalization, demographics, – Strong links to social inclusion– Good data, can focus on wealth as well as income

• “Southern”: Developing country focus (Humanity Divided)– Coverage of social

protection/services– Progressive taxes– Role of women

Page 3: Unpacking Inequalities in Europe and Central Asia

Neither focus is quite right for our region’s programme countries

• Post-socialist legacies left well established systems of social protection, services . . . – But with growing gaps?

• Position of women better than in other developing regions . . .

– But is progress being lost?• Inequalities in our region do

seem to be important– Apparent in national

consultations– Maybe because people aren’t

used to them?

Page 4: Unpacking Inequalities in Europe and Central Asia

Regional inequality narratives• Two common stories:– Transition economies: “Paradise lost”

• Very low pre-1990 inequalities• Huge post-1990 increases• Result: (very) high levels of inequalities

– Turkey: “Traditional developing country profile”• High levels of income inequality . . .• . . . That are coming down

• Do the stories hold up? What do the data say?– Transition economies—Yes, but:

• Choice of base year matters a lot• Lots of national differences

– Turkey: Yes—but inequalities are still high• Caveat: Data are imperfect, inconsistent

Page 5: Unpacking Inequalities in Europe and Central Asia

Western CIS, South Caucasus: Do they fit the profile?

1981 1990 1993 1996 1999 2002 2005 2008 2010*0.1

0.2

0.3

0.4

0.5

Armenia

Azerbaijan

Belarus

Georgia

Moldova

UkraineIncome inequality: Gini coefficients

* 2010, or most recent year. Source: POVCALNET (internationally comparable data).

Page 6: Unpacking Inequalities in Europe and Central Asia

Turkey, Western Balkans: Do they fit the profile?

1981 1990 1993 1996 1999 2002 2005 2008 2010*0.2

0.3

0.4

0.5

Albania

BiH

FYRoM

Montenegro

Serbia

Turkey

* 2010, or most recent year. Source: POVCALNET (internationally comparable data).

Income inequality: Gini coefficients

Page 7: Unpacking Inequalities in Europe and Central Asia

Central Asia: Does it fit the profile?

1981 1990 1993 1996 1999 2002 2005 2008 2010*0.2

0.3

0.4

0.5

0.6Kazakhstan

Kyrgyzstan

Tajikistan

Income inequality: Gini coefficients

Turkmenistan?

Uzbekistan?

* 2010, or most recent year. Source: POVCALNET (internationally comparable data).

Page 8: Unpacking Inequalities in Europe and Central Asia

Low levels of/reductions in income inequality can help reduce poverty . . .

2002 2005 2008 2011-0.05

0.00

0.05

0.10

0.15

0.20

0.25

0.30

Poverty rate (%)

Gini coefficient

2002 2005 2008 20100.3

0.4

0.5

0.6

0.7

0.8

Poverty rate (%)

Gini coefficient

Poverty threshold: PPP$4.30/day. Source: POVCALNET (internationally comparable data).

Belarus Moldova

Page 9: Unpacking Inequalities in Europe and Central Asia

. . . While high/rising income inequalities can make poverty worse

2002 2005 20080.20

0.25

0.30

0.35

0.40

0.45

Poverty rate (%)Gini coefficient

2002 2005 2008 20100.40

0.45

0.50

0.55

0.60

0.65

0.70

0.75

Poverty rate (%)

Gini coefficient

Poverty threshold: PPP$4.30/day. Source: POVCALNET (internationally comparable data).

FYR Macedonia Georgia

Page 10: Unpacking Inequalities in Europe and Central Asia

Income inequality: Some initial conclusions

• Serious inequality concerns in:– FYR Macedonia–Georgia–Albania– Turkey

• Serious data questions• After initial growth in inequalities (1990s),

many countries make progress

Page 11: Unpacking Inequalities in Europe and Central Asia

Initial conclusions (continued)• Other countries seem to have been more

successful—Interpretation?– Statistical anomalies? (Ukraine? Kazakhstan?)– Do policies matter? (Belarus)

• Pro-poor growth often goes with reductions in inequality

• Need to go beyond income inequality

Page 12: Unpacking Inequalities in Europe and Central Asia

Beyond income inequalities: UNDP’s Inequality-adjusted HDI

Montenegro

Belarus

Ukraine

Serbia

Armenia

Azerbaijan BiH

Moldova

Kazakh

stan

Albania

FYRoM

Georgia

Uzbekis

tan

Kyrgyzs

tan

Tajikis

tanTurke

yWorld

7% 8% 9% 10%11% 11% 12% 12%

14% 14% 15% 15% 16%17%

18%

23% 23%

Source: UNDP Human Development Report Office (2012 data).

Human development losses due to inequalities in per-capita GNI, education, life expectancy

Page 13: Unpacking Inequalities in Europe and Central Asia

13

Maybe what matters is exclusion? (Especially from labour markets)

35%

40%

45%

50%

55%

60%

BiH, FYRoM, MNE, SRB

Albania, Turkey

Western CIS

Caucasus

Central Asia

Share of population aged 15 and above

that is employed

World Bank data, UNDP calculations (unweighted averages).

Page 14: Unpacking Inequalities in Europe and Central Asia

. . . Disaggregated by vulnerability criteria (ethnicity)?

BiH FYRoM Serbia Montenegro Croatia Albania

62%

55%

43%

37% 36%

27%

54%53%

49%44%

65%

23%

29%31%

23%20%

14% 13%

Youth

Roma

National

Unemployment rates for youth, Roma

Sources: ILO, national statistical offices, UNDP/EU/World Bank Roma vulnerability database. 2011 data.

Page 15: Unpacking Inequalities in Europe and Central Asia

Other “new poor” (“newly vulnerable”)—Migrant households

42%

32%

25%21%

14% 12%

Ratios of remittance inflows to GDP (2013)

Kyrgyzstan: Income poverty rates

Sources: National statistical offices, World Bank, IMF, CBR data; UNDP estimates.

2010 2011 2012 2013

34%

37%38%

37%

40%

43%45%

44%

W/ remittancesW/out remittances

Page 16: Unpacking Inequalities in Europe and Central Asia

Data review: Some conclusions

– But long lags affect internationally comparable income inequality data

• Reducing income inequalities matters for reducing poverty

• Need to go beyond income inequalities– Post-2015 indicators to

underpin the SDGs

• Better data needed for many inequality indicators– Especially for non-income inequalities

Page 17: Unpacking Inequalities in Europe and Central Asia

Dialog on inequalities “takeaways”• Pluses:– Strong interest from national, regional partners– Empirically: income poverty and inequality seem to

move together in programme countries• Minuses:– Significant measurement issues:

• Data gaps (quality, quantity)• Low awareness of new indicators (e.g., Palma ratios)

– How to measure non-income inequalities?– Except for gender programming, not many

“inequality projects”– Conflation of inequality, poverty?

Page 18: Unpacking Inequalities in Europe and Central Asia

18

From regional “Dialog” to “Human Development Report” on inequalities

• Strengthen inequalities programming

• Strengthen UN regional inequalities “brand”– Link to regional social

protection platform?

• Better connect region with global inequality narratives—and vice-versa

Page 19: Unpacking Inequalities in Europe and Central Asia

19

“Process, not just a publication”• RHDR to serve as platform for: – Continuation of UN post-2015

advocacy around inequalities– Project development– Dissemination of inequalities-

related content, knowledge• Strong use of social media,

innovation opportunities

• Inequality-related SDGs (targets, indicators) to be cross-cutting thread

• Country case studies included

Page 20: Unpacking Inequalities in Europe and Central Asia

Programming questions

• “Stand alone” versus “mainstreaming” inequality programming?– Gender parallel– When does the “inequality lens” add value?

• Socio-economic versus spatial inequalities– When is area-based/regional/local development programming

about reducing (spatial) inequalities?• Do national data support programming to address

inequalities?– Could this be new programming area?– How strong is government interest?

• How to best link to SDGs?

Page 21: Unpacking Inequalities in Europe and Central Asia

Thanks!