Redistribution of income through social benefits over the life course in the Baltic States

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Collection:
Mokslo publikacijos / Scientific publications
Document Type:
Straipsnis / Article
Language:
Anglų kalba / English
Title:
Redistribution of income through social benefits over the life course in the Baltic States
In the Journal:
Studies of transition states and societies [STSS]. 2019, Vol. 11, iss. 2, p. 47-59
Keywords:
LT
Nacionalinė sąskaityba. Pajamos / National accounts. Income.
Summary / Abstract:

LTReikšminiai žodžiai: Baltijos šalys (Baltic states); Perskirstymas; Gyvenimo eiga; Pajamų nelygybė; Skurdas; Redistribution; Life course; Income inequality; Poverty.

ENVertical redistribution refers to the transfer of income from those who have more than they need to those who are in need and is related to the levelling of income inequality and poverty. Vertical redistribution throughout the life course is indicative of the capacity of the welfare state to protect against social risks over the life course. Studies that explore such redistributions often rely on the life-course perspective and use secondary cross-sectional rather than primary data. The goal of the current study is to analyse the impact of social benefits on income inequality and poverty over the life course in the Baltic States. The paper focuses on the three Baltic countries commonly characterised by successful economic performance, low income redistribution and high income inequality. With this aim, analyses were conducted of micro-level data from the 2015 EU-SILC. To evaluate inequality changes across the life course, the study used a decomposition of the Gini index. The evaluation of poverty in different cohorts rested on the poverty rate gap between different groups and the average poverty rate in the country. The findings of our study suggest that the impact of social benefits on the reduction of income inequality is modest. The highest poverty rates are linked to periods of childhood, working age when unemployed and old age. Overall, a context laden with high levels of inequality and poverty cannot ensure adequate protection against social risks over the life course and create a “buffer” for the development of human capital. [From the publication]

ISSN:
1736-8758
Related Publications:
Labour and capital under a neoliberal economic model: economic growth and demographic crisis in Lithuania / Romas Lazutka, Arūnas Juška, Jekaterina Navickė. Europe-Asia studies. 2018, vol. 70, iss. 9, p. 1433-1449.
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2022-03-31 13:50:32
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