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Inequality in Bolivia: Second Opinion
By Lykke E. Andersen*,
La Paz,
10
March 2008.
One of the newsletters last month (How
unequal is Bolivia really?)
argued that it is better to measure inequality on consumption
than on income, as income is very imperfectly measured,
especially in poor countries with a large share of
self-employment. The newsletter also suggested that when
measuring inequality on consumption, United States is probably
more unequal than Bolivia. The latter appears to be incorrect,
as one careful reader kindly pointed out.
The study by Krueger & Perri (2006) investigates the
relationship between income inequality and consumption
inequality in United States and find that the consumption based
GINI coefficient is about 11 percentage points lower than the
income based GINI coefficient
(1), which would bring consumption inequality in the US much
below consumption inequality in Bolivia.
Furthermore, an article in The Economist
"The
new (improved) Gilded Age"
suggests that even consumption based GINI coefficients overstate
inequality in the US, as they measure only how much money we
have spent, not the value gained in the spending. They give the
following example: “Refrigerators are now all but universal in
America, even though refrigerator inequality continues to grow.
The Sub-Zero PRO 48, which the manufacturer calls “a monument to
food preservation”, costs about $11,000, compared with a paltry
$350 for the IKEA Energisk B18 W. The lived difference, however,
is rather smaller than that between having fresh meat and milk
and having none.”
The same argument can be made for cars, TVs, and many other
almost universal household goods in the US. The utility of a
fancy $1.000.000 Ferrari is certainly not 100 times bigger than
the utility of a practical $10.000 used car, and you get pretty
much the same information out of a $200 TV set as a $20.000 TV
set.
Bolivia is very different. Here there is real, lived inequality
as only 30% of households have a refrigerator, 12% a car, and
60% a TV. Some 28% of households do not have electricity, and
78% do not have piped water in their house
(2).
But then again, if your fresh meat and milk walk around on two
or four legs in your garden, you may not derive much utility
from a refrigerator, and if there is no road to your house, a
car is
of little
use. The fact that most households choose to buy a TV before a
refrigerator, suggests that the difference between no
refrigerator and a cheap refrigerator is very small for them. In
Bolivia, public transportation is so cheap and abundant, that
having a private car adds little utility, but quite a lot of
extra worries and expenses.
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