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But Brazil's Gini coefficient has fallen more than five points since 2000, to 0.55.
In other countries where unemployment has remained subdued, namely Germany and the Netherlands, the coefficient has fallen dramatically.
In other countries, where unemployment has remained subdued, such as Germany and the Netherlands, the coefficient has fallen dramatically over the short-term.
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The biggest exception to the general upward trend is Latin America, long the world's most unequal continent, where Gini coefficients have fallen sharply over the past ten years.
Or, as put in economist-speak by the Institute for Fiscal Studies last year: "Over the past two decades … inequality among the bottom 99% has fallen: the Gini coefficient for the bottom 99% was 5% lower in 2011 12, at 0.30, than in 1991".
The Gini coefficient, a standard statistical measure of inequality, has fallen steadily since 2001 (though it remains very high by international standards).
While its income distribution did not change much in the first half of the 1990s, inequality has fallen substantially since 1999; the Gini coefficient was 60.4 in 1990, 58.6 in 1999, and fell to 55.9 in 2006.
But Thailand's level of inequality has fallen over the past couple of decades, not risen: the Gini coefficient of thirty-nine is down from forty-three in 2000.
Pay has fallen too.
Poverty has fallen.
The record has fallen.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
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