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Equality of Opportunity:
Circumstance, Effort and Luck
 Presentation at Conference in Honour of Richard Jolly
               IDS, November 18, 2011

                   Ravi Kanbur
            www.kanbur.dyson.cornell.edu
Outline
• The Paes de Barros et. al. (2009) Measurement of
  Inequality of Opportunity, following from World
  Development Report (2005) and Roemer’s (1998)
  distinction between “circumstance” and “effort”.
• P de B (2009) is fine in practice. Policy
  prescriptions look great to egalitarians. Method
  used is standard. BUT, two issues of principle.
• What happens when one person’s effort becomes
  another person’s circumstance?
• What happens when luck determines difference
  between opportunity and outcomes?
The Method (1)
• “When some of the inequality observed in the
  outcome of interest can be attributed to exogenous
  circumstances, such as a person’s gender or family
  background, it reflects inequality of opportunity in a
  society.
• In an ideal world, inequality in outcomes should
  reflect only differences in effort and choices
  individuals make, as well as luck.” (Paes de Barros et
  al, 2009).
The Method (2)
• This follows Roemer (1998). “Circumstance”
  versus “Effort”.

• More on “Luck” later.
The Method (3)
• Circumstance Variables actually used in Paes
  de Barros et. al. (2009):
  – Gender
  – Race/Ethnicity
  – Birthplace
  – Mothers’ Education
  – Father’s Education
  – Father’s Occupation
The Method (4)
• Decompose inequality of the outcome
  (income or consumption) into within group
  and between group components.
• “The difference in outcomes between cells can
  be attributed to inequality of opportunity,
  while the differences within cells can be
  considered the result of effort or luck.”
The Method (5)
• “Inequality of opportunity” was assessed for
  labor earnings, household income, and
  household consumption.
• It was estimated to account for between one-
  fifth and one half of overall inequality in the
  seven Latin American countries reviewed.
Results (1)
• Policy Conclusions:
  – Inequality of Opportunity is important (one fifth
    to one half, and this is a lower bound).
  – Major policy strategy to reduce it is to address
    discrimination between genders, ethnicities,
    locations etc. across a range of interventions.
Results (2)
• So, policy conclusions look good to egalitarians.
• Methods look good to inequality economists. In
  fact we have been using them for decades.
• Inequality decompositions across gender,
  ethnicities, region etc are bread and butter fare
  by now.
• New interpretations of between group
  component have also been attempted eg Kanbur-
  Zhang (2001) have interpreted it as
  “polarization.” Also, Kanbur (2006).
Two Issues of Principle
• “In an ideal world, inequality in outcomes should
  reflect only differences in effort and choices
  individuals make, as well as luck.” (Paes de
  Barros, 2009).
• Is this right? Two issues:
• What if one person’s effort leads to another
  person’s circumstance?
• Is inequality brought about by luck justifiable, ie
  not a legitimate object for policy intervention?
Circumstance and Effort (1)
• “Intergenerationalities” (Kanbur, 2010)
• “for I, the Lord your God, am a jealous God,
  visiting the iniquity of the fathers on the
  children, and on the third and the fourth
  generations of those who hate Me“
• "Fathers shall not be put to death for their
  sons, nor shall sons be put to death for their
  fathers; everyone shall be put to death for his
  own sin."
Circumstance and Effort (2)
• If parents choose to exert little effort and indulge
  profligate tastes, so they do not have sufficient
  resources to educate their children, the
  “circumstances” doctrine would say the education
  outcome for the children should be corrected.
• But this would surely violate the “effort and tastes”
  doctrine, which would say that the outcomes are fine
  as they are.
• If our moral intuitions side with the first bullet above,
  what then is left of the “effort and tastes” component
  of the distinction between “inequality of opportunity”
  and “inequality of outcome”?
Luck (1)
• “Consider a group of individuals who initially have equal
  endowments and who agree voluntarily to enter a lottery with
  very unequal prizes. The resultant inequality of income is
  surely required to permit the individuals in question to make
  the most of their initial equality…Much of the inequality of
  income produced by payment in accordance with the product
  reflects ‘equalizing’ difference or the satisfaction of men’s
  tastes for uncertainty…Redistribution of income after the
  event is equivalent to denying them the opportunity to enter
  the lottery.” (Milton Friedman, Capitalism and Freedom, 1962)
Luck (2)
• So, consider two individuals, A and B, absolutely
  identical in every respect. (Kanbur, 1987).
• There is a cake. Instead of dividing it equally they
  decide to toss for it. A wins, B loses.
• There is equality ex ante, inequality ex post.
• Is the ex post inequality a justifiable argument for
  redistribution?
• If you say yes, you are an “outcomes” person. If
  you say no you are an “opportunities” person.
Luck (3)
• One way to interpret the Roemer and post-Roemer
  developments is as modifying the sharp setting of the
  Friedman thought experiment, by saying that
  individuals are not identical, that there are structural
  inequalities, and that observed inequalities reflect
  these structural inequalities.
• BUT this concedes the basic premise, that outcomes as
  a result of random shocks (even if the lottery is freely
  chosen) are out of bounds for redistribution. This thin
  end of the wedge should be blocked by egalitarians.
Conclusion
• P de B is fine in practice. Policy prescriptions
  look great to egalitarians. Method used is
  standard. BUT, two issues of principle.
• What happens when one person’s effort
  becomes another person’s circumstance?
• What happens when luck determines
  difference between opportunity and
  outcomes?
Some References
Friedman, M. 1962. Capitalism and Freedom. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
Kanbur, Ravi. 1987. “The Standard of Living: Uncertainty, Inequality and Opportunity,”
    in Geoffrey Hawthorn (ed.) The Standard of Living. Cambridge: Cambridge
    university Press.
Kanbur, Ravi. 2006. “The Policy Significance of Inequality Decompositions.” Journal of
    Economic Inequality. Vol. 4, No. 3, December, pp 367-374.
Kanbur, Ravi. 2010. “Intergenerationalities: Some Educational Questions on Quality,
    Quantity and Opportunity,” Humanum: Revista Latino Americana De Desarrollo
    Humane, No. 1, July 2010.
“What Difference Do Polarization Measures Make?" (with X. Zhang), Journal of
    Development Studies, Vol. 37, No. 3, pp. 85-98, February 2001.
Paes de Barros, Ricardo, Francisco H.H. Ferreira, Jose R. Molinas Vega and Jaime
    Saavedra Chanduvi. 2009. Measuring Inequality of Opporutnities in Latin America
    and the Caribbean. World Bank, Washington, D.C.
Roemer, John E. 1998. Equality of Opportunity. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University
    Press.
World Bank. 2005. World Development Report 2006: Equity and Development.
    Washington, DC: The World Bank and Oxford University Press.

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Ravi Kanbur - Equality of opportunity

  • 1. Equality of Opportunity: Circumstance, Effort and Luck Presentation at Conference in Honour of Richard Jolly IDS, November 18, 2011 Ravi Kanbur www.kanbur.dyson.cornell.edu
  • 2. Outline • The Paes de Barros et. al. (2009) Measurement of Inequality of Opportunity, following from World Development Report (2005) and Roemer’s (1998) distinction between “circumstance” and “effort”. • P de B (2009) is fine in practice. Policy prescriptions look great to egalitarians. Method used is standard. BUT, two issues of principle. • What happens when one person’s effort becomes another person’s circumstance? • What happens when luck determines difference between opportunity and outcomes?
  • 3. The Method (1) • “When some of the inequality observed in the outcome of interest can be attributed to exogenous circumstances, such as a person’s gender or family background, it reflects inequality of opportunity in a society. • In an ideal world, inequality in outcomes should reflect only differences in effort and choices individuals make, as well as luck.” (Paes de Barros et al, 2009).
  • 4. The Method (2) • This follows Roemer (1998). “Circumstance” versus “Effort”. • More on “Luck” later.
  • 5. The Method (3) • Circumstance Variables actually used in Paes de Barros et. al. (2009): – Gender – Race/Ethnicity – Birthplace – Mothers’ Education – Father’s Education – Father’s Occupation
  • 6. The Method (4) • Decompose inequality of the outcome (income or consumption) into within group and between group components. • “The difference in outcomes between cells can be attributed to inequality of opportunity, while the differences within cells can be considered the result of effort or luck.”
  • 7. The Method (5) • “Inequality of opportunity” was assessed for labor earnings, household income, and household consumption. • It was estimated to account for between one- fifth and one half of overall inequality in the seven Latin American countries reviewed.
  • 8. Results (1) • Policy Conclusions: – Inequality of Opportunity is important (one fifth to one half, and this is a lower bound). – Major policy strategy to reduce it is to address discrimination between genders, ethnicities, locations etc. across a range of interventions.
  • 9. Results (2) • So, policy conclusions look good to egalitarians. • Methods look good to inequality economists. In fact we have been using them for decades. • Inequality decompositions across gender, ethnicities, region etc are bread and butter fare by now. • New interpretations of between group component have also been attempted eg Kanbur- Zhang (2001) have interpreted it as “polarization.” Also, Kanbur (2006).
  • 10. Two Issues of Principle • “In an ideal world, inequality in outcomes should reflect only differences in effort and choices individuals make, as well as luck.” (Paes de Barros, 2009). • Is this right? Two issues: • What if one person’s effort leads to another person’s circumstance? • Is inequality brought about by luck justifiable, ie not a legitimate object for policy intervention?
  • 11. Circumstance and Effort (1) • “Intergenerationalities” (Kanbur, 2010) • “for I, the Lord your God, am a jealous God, visiting the iniquity of the fathers on the children, and on the third and the fourth generations of those who hate Me“ • "Fathers shall not be put to death for their sons, nor shall sons be put to death for their fathers; everyone shall be put to death for his own sin."
  • 12. Circumstance and Effort (2) • If parents choose to exert little effort and indulge profligate tastes, so they do not have sufficient resources to educate their children, the “circumstances” doctrine would say the education outcome for the children should be corrected. • But this would surely violate the “effort and tastes” doctrine, which would say that the outcomes are fine as they are. • If our moral intuitions side with the first bullet above, what then is left of the “effort and tastes” component of the distinction between “inequality of opportunity” and “inequality of outcome”?
  • 13. Luck (1) • “Consider a group of individuals who initially have equal endowments and who agree voluntarily to enter a lottery with very unequal prizes. The resultant inequality of income is surely required to permit the individuals in question to make the most of their initial equality…Much of the inequality of income produced by payment in accordance with the product reflects ‘equalizing’ difference or the satisfaction of men’s tastes for uncertainty…Redistribution of income after the event is equivalent to denying them the opportunity to enter the lottery.” (Milton Friedman, Capitalism and Freedom, 1962)
  • 14. Luck (2) • So, consider two individuals, A and B, absolutely identical in every respect. (Kanbur, 1987). • There is a cake. Instead of dividing it equally they decide to toss for it. A wins, B loses. • There is equality ex ante, inequality ex post. • Is the ex post inequality a justifiable argument for redistribution? • If you say yes, you are an “outcomes” person. If you say no you are an “opportunities” person.
  • 15. Luck (3) • One way to interpret the Roemer and post-Roemer developments is as modifying the sharp setting of the Friedman thought experiment, by saying that individuals are not identical, that there are structural inequalities, and that observed inequalities reflect these structural inequalities. • BUT this concedes the basic premise, that outcomes as a result of random shocks (even if the lottery is freely chosen) are out of bounds for redistribution. This thin end of the wedge should be blocked by egalitarians.
  • 16. Conclusion • P de B is fine in practice. Policy prescriptions look great to egalitarians. Method used is standard. BUT, two issues of principle. • What happens when one person’s effort becomes another person’s circumstance? • What happens when luck determines difference between opportunity and outcomes?
  • 17. Some References Friedman, M. 1962. Capitalism and Freedom. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. Kanbur, Ravi. 1987. “The Standard of Living: Uncertainty, Inequality and Opportunity,” in Geoffrey Hawthorn (ed.) The Standard of Living. Cambridge: Cambridge university Press. Kanbur, Ravi. 2006. “The Policy Significance of Inequality Decompositions.” Journal of Economic Inequality. Vol. 4, No. 3, December, pp 367-374. Kanbur, Ravi. 2010. “Intergenerationalities: Some Educational Questions on Quality, Quantity and Opportunity,” Humanum: Revista Latino Americana De Desarrollo Humane, No. 1, July 2010. “What Difference Do Polarization Measures Make?" (with X. Zhang), Journal of Development Studies, Vol. 37, No. 3, pp. 85-98, February 2001. Paes de Barros, Ricardo, Francisco H.H. Ferreira, Jose R. Molinas Vega and Jaime Saavedra Chanduvi. 2009. Measuring Inequality of Opporutnities in Latin America and the Caribbean. World Bank, Washington, D.C. Roemer, John E. 1998. Equality of Opportunity. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press. World Bank. 2005. World Development Report 2006: Equity and Development. Washington, DC: The World Bank and Oxford University Press.