You’ve probably heard about the poverty line – the amount of money that is often used as the minimum daily amount a person needs to avoid poverty. Sometimes calculated as US$2.00 a day, or US$1.25 a day, this amount is intended to provide a universal way to measure how many people in the world are poor. It is used, for example, by the United Nations to measure the world’s progress in fighting poverty. What you might not realise is that this measure is flawed.This report was commisioned by International Women's Development Agenc
This chapter seeks to provide a gender- sensitive critique of both income- based and multidimensiona...
Measuring the overall degree of poverty in a society, any poverty index is desired to depend on the ...
When measuring poverty over time analysts must choose the value of the income elasticity of the pove...
This paper challenges the use of poverty incidence among female-headed households as a measure of fe...
This chapter documents a participatory approach to developing a new, gender-sensitive measure of dep...
This essay concerns itself with the measurement of poverty. Through a lens of gender sensitivity, co...
At the turn of the millennium, problems of poverty measurement was reopened in development discourse...
One way of measuring the deprivation or poverty of persons is to use money based measures: a person ...
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 measurement of poverty as ‘consistent’ poverty offers a solution to one of the primary problems ...
Whether or not an individual is deemed to be poor depends not merely on that individual's economic a...
Poverty is “pronounced deprivation in well-being. ” The conventional view links well-being primarily...
International audienceMany authors have insisted on the necessity of defining poverty as a multidime...
Is there any redemption for the poverty line approach? Despite its narrow focus, the incomepoverty l...
This chapter seeks to provide a gender- sensitive critique of both income- based and multidimensiona...
Measuring the overall degree of poverty in a society, any poverty index is desired to depend on the ...
When measuring poverty over time analysts must choose the value of the income elasticity of the pove...
This paper challenges the use of poverty incidence among female-headed households as a measure of fe...
This chapter documents a participatory approach to developing a new, gender-sensitive measure of dep...
This essay concerns itself with the measurement of poverty. Through a lens of gender sensitivity, co...
At the turn of the millennium, problems of poverty measurement was reopened in development discourse...
One way of measuring the deprivation or poverty of persons is to use money based measures: a person ...
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 measurement of poverty as ‘consistent’ poverty offers a solution to one of the primary problems ...
Whether or not an individual is deemed to be poor depends not merely on that individual's economic a...
Poverty is “pronounced deprivation in well-being. ” The conventional view links well-being primarily...
International audienceMany authors have insisted on the necessity of defining poverty as a multidime...
Is there any redemption for the poverty line approach? Despite its narrow focus, the incomepoverty l...
This chapter seeks to provide a gender- sensitive critique of both income- based and multidimensiona...
Measuring the overall degree of poverty in a society, any poverty index is desired to depend on the ...
When measuring poverty over time analysts must choose the value of the income elasticity of the pove...