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Branko Milanovic

Lead Economist
BRANKO MILANOVIC is Lead Economist in the World Bank research group and visiting professor at the School of Public Policy at University of Maryland. Ph.D. in economics 1987, Belgrade University. Interests: income distribution, inequality, globalization.

The author's works below are drawn from the World Bank's institutional archives.


World Bank working papers and publications

1 .Global income inequality by the numbers : in history and now --an overview--
2 .Explaining the demand for sovereignty
3 .Global inequality : from class to location, from proletarians to migrants
4 .Four critiques of the redistribution hypothesis : an assessment
5 .Global inequality and the global inequality extraction ratio: the story of the past two centuries
6 .Global inequality recalculated : the effect of new 2005 PPP estimates on global inequality
7 .Reform and inequality during the transition : an analysis using panel household survey data, 1990-2005
8 .Political alternation as a restraint on investing in influence : evidence from the post-communist transition
9 .Where in the world are you ? Assessing the importance of circumstance and effort in a world of different mean country incomes and (almost) no migration
10 .Measuring ancient inequality
11 .Global income inequality : what it is and why it matters
12 .Half a world : regional inequality in five great federations
13 .Does tariff liberalization increase wage inequality ? - Some empirical evidence
14 .The World Bank economic review 19 (1)
15 .Is inequality in Africa really different?
16 .Income convergence during the disintegration of the world economy, 1919-39
17 .Can we discern the effect of globalization on income distribution? evidence from household budget surveys
18 .Does Liberte = Egalite ? A survey of the empirical links between democracy and inequality with some evidence on the transition economies
19 .Decomposing world income distribution : does the world have a middle class ?
20 .Democracy and income inequality : an empirical analysis
21 .Social transfers and social assistance - an empirical analysis using Latvian household survey data
22 .Dividing the spoils - pensions, privatization, and reform in Russia's transition
23 .Do more unequal countries redistribute more? does the median voter hypothesis hold?
24 .True world income distribution, 1988 and 1993 - first calculations, based on household surveys alone
25 .The World Bank economic review 13 (3)
26 .Change in the perception of the poverty line during times of depression : Russia 1993-96
27 .Poverty and the economic transition : how do changes in economies of scale affect poverty rates for different households?
28 .Explaining the increase in inequality during the transition
29 .Income, inequality, and poverty during the transition from planned to market economy
30 .Nations, conglomerates, and empires : the tradeoff between income and sovereignty
31 .Poverty, inequality, and social policy in transition economies
32 .Transfers and the transition from socialism : key tradeoffs
33 .Determinants of cross-country income inequality : an augmented Kuznets hypothesis
34 .Cash social transfers, direct taxes, and income distribution in late socialism
35 .Social costs of the transition to capitalism : Poland, 1990-91
36 .Eastern Europe and Russian Federation - Distributional impact of cash and in-kind social transfers in Eastern Europe and Russia
37 .Privatization in Eastern and Central Europe : objectives, constraints, and models of divestiture
38 .The World Bank economic review 5(2)
39 .Poverty in Poland : 1978-88
40 .Poverty in Poland, Hungary, and Yugoslavia in the years of crisis, 1978-87




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