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Inequality and Globalization : Improving Measurement through Integrated Financial Accounts / Archawa Paweenawat, Robert M. Townsend.

By: Contributor(s): Material type: TextLanguage: Publisher: Princeton, NJ Princeton University Press, [2024]Copyright date: ©2024Description: 1 online resourceContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 9780691258041
Subject(s): Online resources:
Contents:
Frontmatter -- contents -- Illustrations -- Acknowledgments -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Townsend Thai Surveys and Financial Accounts -- 3 Constructing Community-Level Economic Accounts -- 4 A Model Economy for the Thai Data -- 5 Taking Integrated Financial Accounts to the U.S. -- 6 U.S. Integrated Macro Accounts -- 7 Construction of Disaggregated Integrated Accounts for the U.S. -- Appendix -- References -- Index -- The Gorman Lectur es in Economics / Richard Blundell -- Biography -- A NOTE ON THE TYPE
Title is part of eBook package: EBOOK PACKAGE Business and Economics 2024 De GruyterTitle is part of eBook package: EBOOK PACKAGE Business and Economics 2024 ENG De GruyterTitle is part of eBook package: Princeton University Press Complete eBook-Package 2024 De GruyterSummary: A remedy for the gap between micro and macro data, making measures of inequality and national income consistent with each otherIncreasing inequality, the impact of globalization, and the disparate effects of financial regulation and innovation are extraordinarily important topics that fuel spirited policy debates. And yet the facts underlying these debates are of doubtful accuracy. In reality, as Archawa Paweenawat and Robert Townsend show in Inequality and Globalization, there is a large gap between micro household surveys, which measure key outcomes such as inequality, and aggregated financial accounts, which measure macroeconomic totals and growth. Paweenawat and Townsend propose a remedy: integrated financial accounts, in which the flows in income statements, including saving and investment, are consistent with the changes in financial assets and liabilities in the balance sheet at micro and macro levels. None of the leading US micro household surveys or macro accounts meets this criterion.Drawing on extensive data from fieldwork in Thailand, Paweenawat and Townsend show how consistent integrated financial accounts at the individual household and small enterprise level can be created using household and firm survey data. Aggregated to the village level, these accounts can link anecdotal stories of individual households to their financial accounts, document the real impact on them from growth, and assess what would have happened to them if trade and financial liberalization had not been allowed. Paweenawat and Townsend then describe the next logical step: creating integrated financial accounts for the United States, working from the ground up and the top down. Only with these integrated accounts will policy debates on inequality and globalization have a solid factual basis.
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Frontmatter -- contents -- Illustrations -- Acknowledgments -- 1 Introduction -- 2 Townsend Thai Surveys and Financial Accounts -- 3 Constructing Community-Level Economic Accounts -- 4 A Model Economy for the Thai Data -- 5 Taking Integrated Financial Accounts to the U.S. -- 6 U.S. Integrated Macro Accounts -- 7 Construction of Disaggregated Integrated Accounts for the U.S. -- Appendix -- References -- Index -- The Gorman Lectur es in Economics / Richard Blundell -- Biography -- A NOTE ON THE TYPE

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A remedy for the gap between micro and macro data, making measures of inequality and national income consistent with each otherIncreasing inequality, the impact of globalization, and the disparate effects of financial regulation and innovation are extraordinarily important topics that fuel spirited policy debates. And yet the facts underlying these debates are of doubtful accuracy. In reality, as Archawa Paweenawat and Robert Townsend show in Inequality and Globalization, there is a large gap between micro household surveys, which measure key outcomes such as inequality, and aggregated financial accounts, which measure macroeconomic totals and growth. Paweenawat and Townsend propose a remedy: integrated financial accounts, in which the flows in income statements, including saving and investment, are consistent with the changes in financial assets and liabilities in the balance sheet at micro and macro levels. None of the leading US micro household surveys or macro accounts meets this criterion.Drawing on extensive data from fieldwork in Thailand, Paweenawat and Townsend show how consistent integrated financial accounts at the individual household and small enterprise level can be created using household and firm survey data. Aggregated to the village level, these accounts can link anecdotal stories of individual households to their financial accounts, document the real impact on them from growth, and assess what would have happened to them if trade and financial liberalization had not been allowed. Paweenawat and Townsend then describe the next logical step: creating integrated financial accounts for the United States, working from the ground up and the top down. Only with these integrated accounts will policy debates on inequality and globalization have a solid factual basis.

Mode of access: Internet via World Wide Web.

Archawa Paweenawat, a development economist, is Head of Business Research of the Puey Ungphakorn Institute for Economic Research at the Bank of Thailand. Robert M. Townsend is the Elizabeth and James Killian Professor of Economics at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. He is the author of Distributed Ledgers: Design and Regulation of Financial Infrastructure and Payment Systems, Chronicles from the Field: The Townsend Thai Project, Households as Corporate Firms: An Analysis of Household Finance Using Integrated Household Surveys and Corporate Financial Accounting.

In English.

Description based on online resource; title from PDF title page (publisher's Web site, viewed March 03 2026)

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