Vulnerability to poverty has been proposed in the literature as an ex ante measure of poverty risk useful for the identification of those who may fall into poverty in the future (Zhang and Guanghua 2008). This paper complements the existing literature on vulnerability measures, by investigating empirically how indexes precision varies according to the quantity of information available, in order to understand which is the best predictor of poverty conditional on data at hand. Using the British Household Panel Survey, we show that information quantity affects differently the predictive power of indexes
Traditional poverty measures neglect several important dimensions of household welfare. In this pape...
The paper assesses the extent of household vulnerability to poverty in Pakistan. Preferably, househo...
Is cross-sectional poverty a reflection of real economic and social disadvantage? Does total number ...
The recent common feeling about a skyrocketing economic risk has drawn increasing attention to its r...
There are alternative definitions of vulnerability to poverty. Most researchers prefer to define vul...
According to the recent report of The Commission on the Measurement of Economic Performance and Soci...
Etudes & documentsTraditional poverty measures fail to indicate the degree of risk of becoming or re...
This article carries out a validation exercise of vulnerability measures as predictors of poverty at...
The literature on welfare analysis has recently started to take into account uncertainty and insecur...
Drawing on recent work concerning the statistical robustness of inequality statistics we examine the...
Standard poverty analysis makes statements about deprivation after the veil of uncertainty has been...
There are four main reasons why measures of poverty may not be robust. Sampling error occurs because...
The concept of vulnerability extends the idea of poverty to include idiosyncratic as well as a...
A household's observed poverty status is an ex-post measure of a household's well-being (or lack the...
This paper presents a methodology to measure vulnerability to asset-poverty. Using repeated cross-se...
Traditional poverty measures neglect several important dimensions of household welfare. In this pape...
The paper assesses the extent of household vulnerability to poverty in Pakistan. Preferably, househo...
Is cross-sectional poverty a reflection of real economic and social disadvantage? Does total number ...
The recent common feeling about a skyrocketing economic risk has drawn increasing attention to its r...
There are alternative definitions of vulnerability to poverty. Most researchers prefer to define vul...
According to the recent report of The Commission on the Measurement of Economic Performance and Soci...
Etudes & documentsTraditional poverty measures fail to indicate the degree of risk of becoming or re...
This article carries out a validation exercise of vulnerability measures as predictors of poverty at...
The literature on welfare analysis has recently started to take into account uncertainty and insecur...
Drawing on recent work concerning the statistical robustness of inequality statistics we examine the...
Standard poverty analysis makes statements about deprivation after the veil of uncertainty has been...
There are four main reasons why measures of poverty may not be robust. Sampling error occurs because...
The concept of vulnerability extends the idea of poverty to include idiosyncratic as well as a...
A household's observed poverty status is an ex-post measure of a household's well-being (or lack the...
This paper presents a methodology to measure vulnerability to asset-poverty. Using repeated cross-se...
Traditional poverty measures neglect several important dimensions of household welfare. In this pape...
The paper assesses the extent of household vulnerability to poverty in Pakistan. Preferably, househo...
Is cross-sectional poverty a reflection of real economic and social disadvantage? Does total number ...