Publication

Jan 2002

This paper describes the construction of a Social Accounting Matrix (SAM) for Bolivia for the year 1997. Three distinctive features render the SAM a useful starting point for distributional analyses. First, production in the agricultural and services sector is split up into formal and informal activities to account for the fact that poverty is largely confined to the latter. Second, factor and household accounts exhibit a high level of disaggregation, thus permitting the monitoring of the factorial and personal income distribution. Finally, the SAM contains a detailed system of accumulation balances which reveals the distribution of assets among household groups.

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Author Rainer Thiele, Daniel Piazolo
Series Kiel Institute Working Papers
Issue 1094
Publisher Kiel Institute for the World Economy
Copyright © 2002 Kiel Institute for the World Economy
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