Are We Confusing Poverty with Preferences?
Modifying the national poverty line to the context of observed consumption patterns of the poor is becoming popular. A context-specific poverty line would be more consistent with preferences. This paper provides theoretical and empirical evidence t...
Main Authors: | , , |
---|---|
Language: | English en_US |
Published: |
World Bank, Washington, DC
2015
|
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2015/04/24415505/confusing-poverty-preferences http://hdl.handle.net/10986/21862 |
Summary: | Modifying the national poverty line to
the context of observed consumption patterns of the poor is
becoming popular. A context-specific poverty line would be
more consistent with preferences. This paper provides
theoretical and empirical evidence that the contrary holds
and that the national poverty line is more appropriate for
comparing living standards among the poor, at least under
prevailing conditions in Mozambique and Ghana. The problem
lies in the risk of downscaling the burden associated with
cheap-calorie diets and the low nonfood component of the
rural poor. The paper illustrates how observed behavior may
neither reveal preferences nor detect heterogeneous
preferences among the poor. Rather, the consumption pattern
is the upshot of the poverty condition itself. Poverty is
confused with preferences if observed cheap-calorie diets
are seen as a matter of taste, whereas in fact they reflect
a lack of means to consume a preferred diet of higher
quality, as food Engel curve estimates indicate. Likewise, a
smaller nonfood component is not a matter of a particular
distaste, but an adaptation to the fact that various nonfood
items (such as transport) and basic services (such as
electricity and health) are simply absent in rural areas. |
---|