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School Research Seminar

Under the Spell of Institutional Logics: Unpacking the Effects of Institutional Forces on Public Entrepreneurial Opportunities

Appropriate public policy on inequality hinges critically on understanding inequality's effects on the living conditions of the poor, on social mobility, and on nationalist populism. This paper describes two empirical regularities. First, an increase in inequality typically does not coincide with immiserisation of the poor and lower middle class. Over 80% of economies where inequality has risen since 2000 have also increased the average incomes of their populations' bottom 50%. Second, for political upheaval individual well-being and expectations on its trajectory matter more than does inequality. When these causal factors diverge, the role of inequality is, therefore, correspondingly diminished. Public policy needs to counter misinterpretation and disinformation on inequality with rigorous analysis and empirical evidence.

Seminar Room 2-3,
Level 2, Manasseh Meyer,
Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy,
National University of Singapore
Thu 20 February 2020
12:15 PM - 01:30 PM

Tommy Høyvarde Clausen

Tommy Høyvarde Clausen

Academic Visitor, LKYSPP, NUS; Professor, Nord Business School, Nord University, Norway

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Mehmet Akif Demircioglu

Mehmet Akif Demircioglu

Assistant Professor, LKYSPP