2015
DOI: 10.1590/1981-38212014000200009
|View full text |Cite
|
Sign up to set email alerts
|

State Transfers, Taxes and Income Inequality in Brazil

Help me understand this report

Search citation statements

Order By: Relevance

Paper Sections

Select...
2
1
1

Citation Types

0
4
0

Year Published

2017
2017
2022
2022

Publication Types

Select...
5
2

Relationship

0
7

Authors

Journals

citations
Cited by 9 publications
(4 citation statements)
references
References 38 publications
0
4
0
Order By: Relevance
“…It was not until the late-1990s that urban and rural workers, formal and informal, were integrated into programmes of social assistance for poverty alleviation. However, no government of the period, facing a complicated parliamentary arithmetic, fundamentally changed the corporatist policy structures it inherited (Medeiros and Souza, 2015). When Congress was given renewed power after 1988 it only became a new channel for the articulation of segmented social interests that developed over the previous decades.…”
Section: Democratization and Redistributive Reformsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It was not until the late-1990s that urban and rural workers, formal and informal, were integrated into programmes of social assistance for poverty alleviation. However, no government of the period, facing a complicated parliamentary arithmetic, fundamentally changed the corporatist policy structures it inherited (Medeiros and Souza, 2015). When Congress was given renewed power after 1988 it only became a new channel for the articulation of segmented social interests that developed over the previous decades.…”
Section: Democratization and Redistributive Reformsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It was not until the late-1990s that urban and rural workers, formal and informal, were integrated into programmes of social assistance for poverty alleviation. However, no government of the period, facing a complicated parliamentary arithmetic, fundamentally changed the corporatist policy structures it inherited (Medeiros & Souza, 2015). When Congress was given renewed power after 1988 it only became a new channel for the articulation of segmented social interests that developed over the previous decades.…”
Section: Democratization Redistributive Reformsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This conclusion is mainly due to the large weight of indirect taxes in the tax collection system, approximately 55%, and the impact of such taxes on the price of the typical consumer basket of lower-income families. Medeiros and Souza (2015) were even more forceful in assessing the unfavorable role of Brazilian fi scal policy in the distribution of income. Evaluating only the direct monetary fl ows between families and the public sector, thus without considering the impact of indirect taxes, they concluded that (mostly through the public sector workers' earnings and pensions) the Brazilian State contributes heavily to raising the Gini index in the country, being unable to impose direct taxation to counterbalance this effect.…”
Section: Taxes Public Expenditure and Income Distribution: A Revimentioning
confidence: 99%