Social exclusion and poverty highlight one particular aspect of social inequality, focusing on the situation of those who are at the bottom. In this chapter, we focus only on poverty and the specific indicators used for monitoring poverty at the EU level. We highlight the methodological and normative assumptions beyond the ‘lead’ indicator of poverty and show the actual empirical implications of these. What is the significance of the specific poverty threshold chosen? What does it imply for cross-country comparison? We discuss the issue of poverty monitoring over time and make a case for the use of the poverty rate with a threshold ‘anchored in time’, and demonstrate the significance of this choice with country-specific evidence. Our chapte...
Poverty is usually defined as a human condition of deprivation of monetary resources or family incom...
Social indicators are an important tool for evaluating a country's level of social development and f...
Moral, efficiency, and rights-based arguments have sparked widespread\ud acknowledgement in both aca...
Income poverty in the European Union (EU) is normally measured with reference to income thresholds d...
In this article, we explore the extent to which a consideration of welfare regime and socioeconomic ...
In Europe poverty is usually measured with the at-risk-of-poverty indicator which defines the povert...
In this paper, using the EU-SILC 2006 data-set, we seek to explore the extent to which a considerati...
Non-monetary deprivation indicators are now widely used for studying and measuring poverty in Europe...
There are differences in the level of poverty, social exclusion and deprivation across the European ...
In the Western world hardly anybody would be living in poverty if the Worldbanks ’ austere poverty t...
Since the end of the 1970s, the concept of social exclusion has been defined and measured in several...
The European Union headline measure of poverty is the at-risk-of poverty measure derived from the pe...
In this paper we address a set of interrelated issues. These comprise the relative merits of unidime...
The European Union Statistics on Income and Living Conditions (EU-SILC) is the main source of infor...
The measurement of poverty and social exclusion is analytically and operationally relevant at all le...
Poverty is usually defined as a human condition of deprivation of monetary resources or family incom...
Social indicators are an important tool for evaluating a country's level of social development and f...
Moral, efficiency, and rights-based arguments have sparked widespread\ud acknowledgement in both aca...
Income poverty in the European Union (EU) is normally measured with reference to income thresholds d...
In this article, we explore the extent to which a consideration of welfare regime and socioeconomic ...
In Europe poverty is usually measured with the at-risk-of-poverty indicator which defines the povert...
In this paper, using the EU-SILC 2006 data-set, we seek to explore the extent to which a considerati...
Non-monetary deprivation indicators are now widely used for studying and measuring poverty in Europe...
There are differences in the level of poverty, social exclusion and deprivation across the European ...
In the Western world hardly anybody would be living in poverty if the Worldbanks ’ austere poverty t...
Since the end of the 1970s, the concept of social exclusion has been defined and measured in several...
The European Union headline measure of poverty is the at-risk-of poverty measure derived from the pe...
In this paper we address a set of interrelated issues. These comprise the relative merits of unidime...
The European Union Statistics on Income and Living Conditions (EU-SILC) is the main source of infor...
The measurement of poverty and social exclusion is analytically and operationally relevant at all le...
Poverty is usually defined as a human condition of deprivation of monetary resources or family incom...
Social indicators are an important tool for evaluating a country's level of social development and f...
Moral, efficiency, and rights-based arguments have sparked widespread\ud acknowledgement in both aca...