This paper discusses the reasons why the current official U.S. poverty measure is outdated and nonresponsive to many anti-poverty initiatives. A variety of efforts to update and improve the statistic have failed, for political, technical, and institutional reasons. Meanwhile, the European Union is taking a very different approach to poverty measurement. The paper ends with four recommended steps that would allow the U.S. to improve its measurement of poverty and economic need.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/58071/1/20323_ftp.pd
The most commonly used measure is the ‘headcount’ ratio - simply the total number of poor households...
The definition of poverty is a social construct. As such, quantitatively measuring poverty is proble...
This paper presents an experimental poverty measure and compares it to the current official measure,...
I am submitting comments on behalf of the National Center for Children in Poverty (NCCP) to express ...
Comments submitted for a Hearing on Establishing a Modern Poverty Measure, Subcommittee on Income Se...
[Excerpt] The measure of poverty currently in use was developed nearly 50 years ago, and was adopted...
How we think about need or deprivation-how we judge its severity, its causes and effects, and the pr...
Although there has been much discussion in the United States regarding the definition of economic po...
Few economic indicators have more salience and pervasive financial impact on everyday lives in the U...
The focus of the international community on poverty reduction has been gaining momentum since the ea...
To better understand poverty and find the best strategies to reduce it, states and localities need t...
The poverty measure presented compares spending needs to resources available to meet those needs. Th...
In recent years, the ability to deal with the problem of poverty in the US, in light of the new &ldq...
In 2012, 46.5 million people were counted as poor in the United States—the number, statistically unc...
Ending poverty is a moral and ethical aim, and living without poverty is one of the human rights. To...
The most commonly used measure is the ‘headcount’ ratio - simply the total number of poor households...
The definition of poverty is a social construct. As such, quantitatively measuring poverty is proble...
This paper presents an experimental poverty measure and compares it to the current official measure,...
I am submitting comments on behalf of the National Center for Children in Poverty (NCCP) to express ...
Comments submitted for a Hearing on Establishing a Modern Poverty Measure, Subcommittee on Income Se...
[Excerpt] The measure of poverty currently in use was developed nearly 50 years ago, and was adopted...
How we think about need or deprivation-how we judge its severity, its causes and effects, and the pr...
Although there has been much discussion in the United States regarding the definition of economic po...
Few economic indicators have more salience and pervasive financial impact on everyday lives in the U...
The focus of the international community on poverty reduction has been gaining momentum since the ea...
To better understand poverty and find the best strategies to reduce it, states and localities need t...
The poverty measure presented compares spending needs to resources available to meet those needs. Th...
In recent years, the ability to deal with the problem of poverty in the US, in light of the new &ldq...
In 2012, 46.5 million people were counted as poor in the United States—the number, statistically unc...
Ending poverty is a moral and ethical aim, and living without poverty is one of the human rights. To...
The most commonly used measure is the ‘headcount’ ratio - simply the total number of poor households...
The definition of poverty is a social construct. As such, quantitatively measuring poverty is proble...
This paper presents an experimental poverty measure and compares it to the current official measure,...