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Why is Mobility in India so Low? Social Insurance, Inequality, and Growth

This paper examines the hypothesis that the persistence of low spatial and marital mobility in rural India, despite increased growth rates and rising inequality in recent years, is due to the existence of sub-caste networks that provide mutual insurance to their members. Unique panel data providing...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Kaivan Munshi and Mark R. Rosenzweig
Format: Printed Book
Published: BREAD Working Paper No. 097 2005
Online Access:http://10.26.1.76/ks/001914.pdf
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100 |a Kaivan Munshi and Mark R. Rosenzweig 
245 |a Why is Mobility in India so Low? Social Insurance, Inequality, and Growth 
260 |c 2005 
260 |b BREAD Working Paper No. 097 
520 |a This paper examines the hypothesis that the persistence of low spatial and marital mobility in rural India, despite increased growth rates and rising inequality in recent years, is due to the existence of sub-caste networks that provide mutual insurance to their members. Unique panel data providing information on caste loans and sub-caste identification are used to show that households that out-marry or migrate lose the services of these networks, which dampens mobility when alternative sources of insurance or finance of comparable quality are unavailable. At the aggregate level, the networks appear to have coped successfully with the rising inequality within sub-castes that accompanied the Green Revolution. Indeed, this increase in inequality lowered overall mobility, which was low to begin with, even further. The results suggest that caste networks will continue to smooth consumption in rural India for the foreseeable future, as they have for centuries. 
856 |u http://10.26.1.76/ks/001914.pdf 
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