On Multidimensional Indices of Poverty

The contribution of recent "multidimensional indices of poverty" may not be as obvious as one thinks. There are two issues in assessing that contribution: whether one believes that a single index can ever be a sufficient statistic of poverty, and whether one aggregates in the space of &quo...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Ravallion, Martin
Language:EN
Published: 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10986/4875
Description
Summary:The contribution of recent "multidimensional indices of poverty" may not be as obvious as one thinks. There are two issues in assessing that contribution: whether one believes that a single index can ever be a sufficient statistic of poverty, and whether one aggregates in the space of "attainments," using prices when appropriate, or "deprivations," using weights set by the analyst. The paper argues that we should aim for a credible set of multiple indices rather than a single multidimensional index. Partial aggregation will still be necessary, but ideally the weights should be consistent with well-informed choices by poor people.