Panel data analysis of internal conflict and income inequality
Ver/ abrir
Use este enlace para citar
http://hdl.handle.net/2183/33922
A non ser que se indique outra cousa, a licenza do ítem descríbese como Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International
Coleccións
Metadatos
Mostrar o rexistro completo do ítemTítulo
Panel data analysis of internal conflict and income inequalityData
2023-06-14Cita bibliográfica
Parsons, B., & Naghshpour , S. (2023). Panel data analysis of internal conflict and income inequality. European Journal of Government and Economics, 12(1), 79-101. https://doi.org/10.17979/ejge.2023.12.1.9283
Resumo
[Abstract] The study determines how worsening internal and external conflict affects income inequality. The paper
accounts for contributing variables and analyzes panel data in an unbalanced panel of 106 countries from 1988 to 2018—
the panel data model groups by development status. The econometric model uses Driscoll and Kraay standard errors to
account for heteroscedasticity, cross
-sectional dependence, and autocorrelation. Worsening internal conflict increases
income inequality in developing countries but not in developed countries. Worsening of internal conflict by one standard
deviation increases income inequality by 0.068 in developing c
ounties. External conflict does not noticeably affect income
inequality in developed or developing panels.
Palabras chave
Income inequality
Gini coefficient
Internal conflict
External conflict
Gini coefficient
Internal conflict
External conflict
Versión do editor
Dereitos
Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International
ISSN
2254- 7088