2016
DOI: 10.1007/s11205-016-1389-z
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Economic and Social Determinants of Human Development: A New Perspective

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Cited by 14 publications
(10 citation statements)
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References 85 publications
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“…Regarding the level of human development, our results suggest that the higher the level of human development, the lower the income inequality. These results are consistent with others found in related literature (Ortega et al, 2016;Larionova & Variamova, 2015) and contribute to complement other works (Amate-Fortes et al, 2017). Also, by controlling for it in our estimations, it allows us to know that the relationship between financial knowledge and income inequality is not conditioned by differences in human development between the different countries in the sample.…”
Section: Resultssupporting
confidence: 93%
“…Regarding the level of human development, our results suggest that the higher the level of human development, the lower the income inequality. These results are consistent with others found in related literature (Ortega et al, 2016;Larionova & Variamova, 2015) and contribute to complement other works (Amate-Fortes et al, 2017). Also, by controlling for it in our estimations, it allows us to know that the relationship between financial knowledge and income inequality is not conditioned by differences in human development between the different countries in the sample.…”
Section: Resultssupporting
confidence: 93%
“…This negative sign, implies that lower levels of corruption are associated with higher levels of human development. These results agree with the United Nations Human Settlements Program, which says that, in general, higher levels of human development are related with lower levels of corruption (Mendonça & Fonseca, 2012) and the results of this study also support the findings of Amate-Fortes et al (2015) and Amate-Fortes, Guarnido-Rueda, and Molina-Morales (2017) showing that corruption negatively affects human development.…”
Section: Ardl Bounds Testsupporting
confidence: 91%
“…Since corruption has adverse consequences on economic growth and human development, governments should pursue policies to fight corruption. This will positively affect people's standard of living as it will lead to quality education, efficient health facilities and good resource management (Amate-Fortes et al, 2015;Amate-Fortes et al, 2017;Iskandar & Saragih, 2018).…”
Section: Conclusion and Policy Implicationsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Several studies have examined the negative effects of income inequality on human development including different dimensions of development such as education or health (Castells-Quintana et al, 2019;Easterly, 2007;Barro, 2000). Amate-Fortes et al (2017) show that the provision of basic infrastructure can have a positive effect on human development. We use the availability of fixed telephone subscriptions as proxy for infrastructure.…”
Section: Methodology 41 Sample and Datamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The pernicious effects of state fragility are deeply felt in education (poor schools, lack of good facilities, teaching materials, classroom resources) that does not promote good learning, heath care (inadequate and unsafe treatment) that reduces life expectancy and gender inequality and discrimination in all areas of life that perpetuate poverty and inequality. The state's inability to provide security and important public services also has an adverse effect on economic growth and individual incomes (Cole, 2003;Amate-Fortes et al, 2017).…”
Section: State Fragility and Human Developmentmentioning
confidence: 99%