We explore how to measure poverty over time, by focusing on trajectories of poverty rather than poverty at a particular point in time. We consider welfare outcomes over a period in time, consisting of a number of spells. We offer a characterization of desirable properties for measuring poverty across these spells, as well as an explicit discussion of three issues. First, should there be scope for compensation so that a poor spell can be compensated for by a non-poor spell? Second, is there scope for discounting or should all spells be equally valued? Third, does the actual sequence of poor spells matter, for example whether they are consecutive or not? We offer a number of measures that implicitly offer different answers to these questions,...
Abstract This paper investigates how to characterize each person's poverty status when his/her ...
peer reviewedWe examine the measurement of individual poverty in an intertemporal context. Our aim i...
How can indices of multidimensional poverty be adapted to produce measures that quantify both the j...
The problem addressed in this D.Phil. thesis is the aggregation of welfare data across individuals a...
This paper examines the aggregation of an indicator of wellbeing over time and across people to meas...
There is a paradox in the normative foundations for chronic and intertemporal poverty measurement. M...
Economists have traditionally used static poverty measures to estimate well-being, target aid, and d...
In this paper we make a methodological proposal to measure poverty accounting for time by proposing ...
This paper makes three contributions to the literature on intertemporal poverty measurement, in part...
Standard poverty measures provide a snapshot of poverty at a single point in time but they cannot ca...
Is cross-sectional poverty a reflection of real economic and social disadvantage? Does total number ...
Traditional measures of poverty persistence, such as ’poverty rate’ (i.e., the number of years spent...
We examine the measurement of individual poverty in an intertemporal context. Our aim is to capture ...
I characterise a general class of intertemporal poverty measures with easily mo-tivated properties, ...
February 2003References: p. 19-20This paper investigates how to characterize each person's poverty s...
Abstract This paper investigates how to characterize each person's poverty status when his/her ...
peer reviewedWe examine the measurement of individual poverty in an intertemporal context. Our aim i...
How can indices of multidimensional poverty be adapted to produce measures that quantify both the j...
The problem addressed in this D.Phil. thesis is the aggregation of welfare data across individuals a...
This paper examines the aggregation of an indicator of wellbeing over time and across people to meas...
There is a paradox in the normative foundations for chronic and intertemporal poverty measurement. M...
Economists have traditionally used static poverty measures to estimate well-being, target aid, and d...
In this paper we make a methodological proposal to measure poverty accounting for time by proposing ...
This paper makes three contributions to the literature on intertemporal poverty measurement, in part...
Standard poverty measures provide a snapshot of poverty at a single point in time but they cannot ca...
Is cross-sectional poverty a reflection of real economic and social disadvantage? Does total number ...
Traditional measures of poverty persistence, such as ’poverty rate’ (i.e., the number of years spent...
We examine the measurement of individual poverty in an intertemporal context. Our aim is to capture ...
I characterise a general class of intertemporal poverty measures with easily mo-tivated properties, ...
February 2003References: p. 19-20This paper investigates how to characterize each person's poverty s...
Abstract This paper investigates how to characterize each person's poverty status when his/her ...
peer reviewedWe examine the measurement of individual poverty in an intertemporal context. Our aim i...
How can indices of multidimensional poverty be adapted to produce measures that quantify both the j...