Options
Ireland's Post-Crisis Recovery, 2012-2019: Was It Pro-Poor?
Author(s)
Date Issued
2022-06-27
Date Available
2023-11-13T10:04:42Z
Abstract
This paper examines anonymous and non-anonymous Growth Incidence Curves (GICs) for after-tax disposable income for Ireland during its recovery period after the Great Recession, 2012-2019. In the absence of suitable panel data, the non-anonymous GICs were constructed on a cohort basis with cohorts formed on the basis of gender, highest level of education attained and the year of that attainment. Both types of GICs are broadly downward sloping over the period indicating that growth was pro-poor on average. Older and less well-educated cohorts fared relatively better over the recovery period, with the corollary that younger, more highly educated cohorts fared relatively less well. Virtually every cohort experienced positive growth however.
Type of Material
Journal Article
Publisher
Economic and Social Studies
Journal
Economic and Social Review
Volume
53
Issue
2
Start Page
137
End Page
172
Web versions
Language
English
Status of Item
Peer reviewed
ISSN
0012-9984
This item is made available under a Creative Commons License
File(s)
No Thumbnail Available
Name
Ireland's Recovery 2012-2019, Was it Pro-Poor - 2nd revision for ESR_corrected graphs.docx
Size
176.65 KB
Format
Unknown
Checksum (MD5)
94adc53a913c8b09058a1b83bd887e35
Owning collection