Neoclassical and structural analysis of poverty: Winning the 'economic kingdom' for the poor in southern Africa

Sarah Bracking

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

In situations characterised by historical injustice in the distribution of economic resources, such as in many southern African 'settler' countries, there is a powerful intuitive case that ameliorative and palliative public policy is insufficient to significantly affect poverty reduction. This is because of the dulling effects on growth caused by significant structural inequality in the distribution of resources. However, the proposition that inequality is a problem for poverty reduction is contentious. This article reviews the neoclassical and structuralist literatures on the relationship between growth, inequality and poverty. It argues that the first is inconclusive and, furthermore, can only be so, while the second requires to be made more relevant to the discussions of how redistribution and inequality relate in legitimate policy and practice. The concept of property regimes can help here, within a more contextual understanding of development in practice as not necessarily involving growth and economic progress, but as being subject to periodic phases of 'de-development', or well-being retrogression. The paper concludes that state-sponsored redistribution policy has an important role to play in changing underlying property regimes for the benefit of the poor in southern Africa. Inequality does matter, and a consideration of radical, redistributive social change is worth rehabilitating as an efficient means of reducing poverty, particularly in situations of low or fluctuating growth. This consideration, in turn, requires a political acceptance of the legitimacy of a broader role for economic public policy and state action.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)887-901
Number of pages14
JournalThird World Quarterly
Volume25
Issue number5
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Jul 2004

Research Beacons, Institutes and Platforms

  • Global Development Institute

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