A Policy Matrix for Inclusive Growth

Working Paper: CEPR ID: DP16078

Authors: Stefanie Stantcheva; Dani Rodrik

Abstract: One of the biggest challenges that countries face today is the very unequal distributions of opportunities, resources, income and wealth across people. Inclusive prosperity – whereby many people from different backgrounds can benefit from economic growth, new technologies, and the fruits of globalization – remains elusive. To address these issues, societies face choices among many different policies and institutional arrangements to try to ensure a proper supply of productive jobs and activities, as well as access to education, financial means, and other endowments that prepare individuals for their participation in the economy. In this paper we offer a simple, organizing framework to think about policies for inclusive prosperity. We provide a comprehensive taxonomy of policies, distinguishing among the types of inequality they address and the stages of the economy where the intervention takes place. The taxonomy clarifies the differences among contending approaches to equity and inclusion and can help analysts assess the impacts and implications of different policies and identify potential gaps.

Keywords: policy; taxonomy; fiscal policy; inequality; insecurity

JEL Codes: A11; E61; H2


Causal Claims Network Graph

Edges that are evidenced by causal inference methods are in orange, and the rest are in light blue.


Causal Claims

CauseEffect
pre-production policies (L23)economic participation (O17)
production stage policies (L52)employment and investment decisions of firms (G31)
employment and investment decisions of firms (G31)existing inequalities (I24)
effective interventions in the production stage (L23)creation of good jobs (J68)
lack of good jobs (F66)adverse social consequences (Z13)

Back to index