2007
DOI: 10.1111/j.1574-0862.2007.00259.x
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Consistent poverty comparisons and inference

Abstract: Building upon the cost of basic needs (CBN) approach, an integrated approach to making consumption-based poverty comparisons is presented. This approach contains two principal modifications to the standard CBN approach. The first permits the development of multiple poverty bundles that are utility consistent. The second recognizes that the poverty line itself is a random variable whose variation influences the degree of confidence in poverty measures. We illustrate the empirical importance of these two methodo… Show more

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Cited by 9 publications
(9 citation statements)
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“…Biodiesel, thus, increases the contribution of agriculture to exports and economic growth. It will also generate new industries which will create new jobs and new markets for the majority of unemployed youth [49].…”
Section: Biodieselmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Biodiesel, thus, increases the contribution of agriculture to exports and economic growth. It will also generate new industries which will create new jobs and new markets for the majority of unemployed youth [49].…”
Section: Biodieselmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…While Mozambique's situation has improved over the past 15 years, it remains sobering, especially in rural areas where 70 per cent of the total population resides. About half of the rural inhabitants are 'absolutely poor', meaning that they have difficulty acquiring basic necessities, such as sufficient food for meeting caloric requirements (Arndt and Simler, 2007). Rural dwellers, especially the poor, depend heavily on crop agriculture for their incomes.…”
Section: Growth Agriculture and Poverty In Mozambiquementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Malawi's official poverty statistics for 2004-05 and 2010-11 compare per capita consumption levels against a single national poverty line. This approach may not be adequate to capture differences in consumption structures across different regions and between urban and rural areas (Arndt and Simler 2007;Tarp et al 2002). Following in the tradition of the Malawian poverty analysis for 1997-98 (see NSO 2001), PBM estimate regional poverty lines for four regions: three rural regions (North, Central, and South) as well as an urban region, consisting of urban areas (cities) across the country.…”
Section: Regional Poverty Lines and Utility Consistencymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The introduction of region-specific poverty lines gives rise to the problem that different poverty bundles may not equate to the same level of welfare. Hence, following Arndt and Simler (2007), PBM adjust the regional bundles using a maximum entropy approach that ensures utility consistency. This entropy procedure is also the default procedure in the PLEASe toolkit.…”
Section: Regional Poverty Lines and Utility Consistencymentioning
confidence: 99%