The Unfairness of (Poverty) Targets
Adopted on September 8, 2000, the United Nations Millennium Declaration stated as its first goal that countries "...[further] resolve to halve, by the year 2015, the proportion of the world's people whose income is less than one dollar a...
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Format: | Policy Research Working Paper |
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World Bank, Washington, DC
2013
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Online Access: | http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2013/02/17288977/unfairness-poverty-targets http://hdl.handle.net/10986/13159 |
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okr-10986-131592021-04-23T14:03:07Z The Unfairness of (Poverty) Targets Allwine, Melanie Rigolini, Jamele López-Calva, Luis F. ANNUAL % CHANGE ANNUAL CHANGE AVERAGE INCOME AVERAGE MONTHLY PER CAPITA INCOME CARIBBEAN REGION CHANGES IN POVERTY COUNTERFACTUAL DAILY INCOME DATA AVAILABILITY DEVELOPING COUNTRIES DEVELOPMENT GOALS DEVELOPMENT POLICY DIMENSIONS OF POVERTY DISTRIBUTION EFFECT DISTRIBUTIONAL CHANGE ECONOMIC GROWTH ECONOMIC PERFORMANCE EXTREME POVERTY EXTREME POVERTY LINE FOOD POLICY GINI COEFFICIENT GROWTH ELASTICITY GROWTH PERFORMANCE GROWTH RATES HEAD COUNT RATIO HEADCOUNT RATIO HIGH POVERTY HOUSEHOLD SURVEYS IMPACT ON POVERTY REDUCTION INCIDENCE OF POVERTY INCOME DISTRIBUTION INCOME DISTRIBUTIONS INCOME INEQUALITY INEQUALITY CONSTANT INEQUALITY LEVELS LOG-NORMAL DISTRIBUTION LONG RUN MEAN EXPENDITURES MEAN INCOME MEAN INCOME GROWTH ORDINARY LEAST SQUARES REGRESSION PER CAPITA INCOME PERFORMANCE INDICATORS POLICY RESEARCH POOR POOR COUNTRIES POVERTY CHANGE POVERTY CHANGES POVERTY EFFECTS POVERTY GAP POVERTY IMPACT POVERTY LEVELS POVERTY LINE POVERTY MEASUREMENT POVERTY MEASURES POVERTY RATE POVERTY RATES POVERTY REDUCTION POVERTY REDUCTION EFFORTS POVERTY REDUCTION TARGETS REDUCING POVERTY REDUCTION IN POVERTY REGIONAL AVERAGES REGIONAL POVERTY RESOURCE ALLOCATION STANDARD DEVIATION SUSTAINABLE POVERTY SUSTAINABLE POVERTY REDUCTION Adopted on September 8, 2000, the United Nations Millennium Declaration stated as its first goal that countries "...[further] resolve to halve, by the year 2015, the proportion of the world's people whose income is less than one dollar a day and the proportion of people who suffer from hunger..." Each country committed to achieve the stated goal, regardless of their initial conditions in terms of poverty and inequality levels. This paper presents a framework to quantify how much initial conditions affect poverty reduction, given a level of "effort" (growth). The framework used in the analysis allows for the growth elasticity of poverty to vary according to changes in the income distribution along the dynamic path of growth and redistribution, unlike previous examples in the literature where this is assumed to be constant. While wealthier countries did perform better in reducing poverty in the last decade and a half (1995-2008), assuming equal initial conditions, the situation reverses: the paper finds a statistically significant negative relation between initial average income and poverty reduction performance, with the poorest countries in the sample going from the worst to the best performers in poverty reduction. The analysis also quantifies how much poorer countries would have scored better, had they had the same level of initial average income as wealthier countries. The results suggest a remarkable change in poverty reduction performance, in addition to the reversal of ranks from worst to best performers. The application of this framework goes beyond poverty targets and the Millennium Development Goals. Given the widespread use of targets to determine resource allocation in education, health, or decentralized social expenditures, it constitutes a helpful tool to measure policy performance toward all kinds of goals. The proposed framework can be useful to evaluate the importance of initial conditions on outcomes, for a wide array of policies. 2013-04-11T19:31:08Z 2013-04-11T19:31:08Z 2013-02 http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2013/02/17288977/unfairness-poverty-targets http://hdl.handle.net/10986/13159 English en_US Policy Research Working Paper;No. 6361 CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/ World Bank World Bank, Washington, DC Publications & Research :: Policy Research Working Paper Publications & Research |
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World Bank |
language |
English en_US |
topic |
ANNUAL % CHANGE ANNUAL CHANGE AVERAGE INCOME AVERAGE MONTHLY PER CAPITA INCOME CARIBBEAN REGION CHANGES IN POVERTY COUNTERFACTUAL DAILY INCOME DATA AVAILABILITY DEVELOPING COUNTRIES DEVELOPMENT GOALS DEVELOPMENT POLICY DIMENSIONS OF POVERTY DISTRIBUTION EFFECT DISTRIBUTIONAL CHANGE ECONOMIC GROWTH ECONOMIC PERFORMANCE EXTREME POVERTY EXTREME POVERTY LINE FOOD POLICY GINI COEFFICIENT GROWTH ELASTICITY GROWTH PERFORMANCE GROWTH RATES HEAD COUNT RATIO HEADCOUNT RATIO HIGH POVERTY HOUSEHOLD SURVEYS IMPACT ON POVERTY REDUCTION INCIDENCE OF POVERTY INCOME DISTRIBUTION INCOME DISTRIBUTIONS INCOME INEQUALITY INEQUALITY CONSTANT INEQUALITY LEVELS LOG-NORMAL DISTRIBUTION LONG RUN MEAN EXPENDITURES MEAN INCOME MEAN INCOME GROWTH ORDINARY LEAST SQUARES REGRESSION PER CAPITA INCOME PERFORMANCE INDICATORS POLICY RESEARCH POOR POOR COUNTRIES POVERTY CHANGE POVERTY CHANGES POVERTY EFFECTS POVERTY GAP POVERTY IMPACT POVERTY LEVELS POVERTY LINE POVERTY MEASUREMENT POVERTY MEASURES POVERTY RATE POVERTY RATES POVERTY REDUCTION POVERTY REDUCTION EFFORTS POVERTY REDUCTION TARGETS REDUCING POVERTY REDUCTION IN POVERTY REGIONAL AVERAGES REGIONAL POVERTY RESOURCE ALLOCATION STANDARD DEVIATION SUSTAINABLE POVERTY SUSTAINABLE POVERTY REDUCTION |
spellingShingle |
ANNUAL % CHANGE ANNUAL CHANGE AVERAGE INCOME AVERAGE MONTHLY PER CAPITA INCOME CARIBBEAN REGION CHANGES IN POVERTY COUNTERFACTUAL DAILY INCOME DATA AVAILABILITY DEVELOPING COUNTRIES DEVELOPMENT GOALS DEVELOPMENT POLICY DIMENSIONS OF POVERTY DISTRIBUTION EFFECT DISTRIBUTIONAL CHANGE ECONOMIC GROWTH ECONOMIC PERFORMANCE EXTREME POVERTY EXTREME POVERTY LINE FOOD POLICY GINI COEFFICIENT GROWTH ELASTICITY GROWTH PERFORMANCE GROWTH RATES HEAD COUNT RATIO HEADCOUNT RATIO HIGH POVERTY HOUSEHOLD SURVEYS IMPACT ON POVERTY REDUCTION INCIDENCE OF POVERTY INCOME DISTRIBUTION INCOME DISTRIBUTIONS INCOME INEQUALITY INEQUALITY CONSTANT INEQUALITY LEVELS LOG-NORMAL DISTRIBUTION LONG RUN MEAN EXPENDITURES MEAN INCOME MEAN INCOME GROWTH ORDINARY LEAST SQUARES REGRESSION PER CAPITA INCOME PERFORMANCE INDICATORS POLICY RESEARCH POOR POOR COUNTRIES POVERTY CHANGE POVERTY CHANGES POVERTY EFFECTS POVERTY GAP POVERTY IMPACT POVERTY LEVELS POVERTY LINE POVERTY MEASUREMENT POVERTY MEASURES POVERTY RATE POVERTY RATES POVERTY REDUCTION POVERTY REDUCTION EFFORTS POVERTY REDUCTION TARGETS REDUCING POVERTY REDUCTION IN POVERTY REGIONAL AVERAGES REGIONAL POVERTY RESOURCE ALLOCATION STANDARD DEVIATION SUSTAINABLE POVERTY SUSTAINABLE POVERTY REDUCTION Allwine, Melanie Rigolini, Jamele López-Calva, Luis F. The Unfairness of (Poverty) Targets |
relation |
Policy Research Working Paper;No. 6361 |
description |
Adopted on September 8, 2000, the United
Nations Millennium Declaration stated as its first goal that
countries "...[further] resolve to halve, by the year
2015, the proportion of the world's people whose income
is less than one dollar a day and the proportion of people
who suffer from hunger..." Each country committed to
achieve the stated goal, regardless of their initial
conditions in terms of poverty and inequality levels. This
paper presents a framework to quantify how much initial
conditions affect poverty reduction, given a level of
"effort" (growth). The framework used in the
analysis allows for the growth elasticity of poverty to vary
according to changes in the income distribution along the
dynamic path of growth and redistribution, unlike previous
examples in the literature where this is assumed to be
constant. While wealthier countries did perform better in
reducing poverty in the last decade and a half (1995-2008),
assuming equal initial conditions, the situation reverses:
the paper finds a statistically significant negative
relation between initial average income and poverty
reduction performance, with the poorest countries in the
sample going from the worst to the best performers in
poverty reduction. The analysis also quantifies how much
poorer countries would have scored better, had they had the
same level of initial average income as wealthier countries.
The results suggest a remarkable change in poverty reduction
performance, in addition to the reversal of ranks from worst
to best performers. The application of this framework goes
beyond poverty targets and the Millennium Development Goals.
Given the widespread use of targets to determine resource
allocation in education, health, or decentralized social
expenditures, it constitutes a helpful tool to measure
policy performance toward all kinds of goals. The proposed
framework can be useful to evaluate the importance of
initial conditions on outcomes, for a wide array of policies. |
format |
Publications & Research :: Policy Research Working Paper |
author |
Allwine, Melanie Rigolini, Jamele López-Calva, Luis F. |
author_facet |
Allwine, Melanie Rigolini, Jamele López-Calva, Luis F. |
author_sort |
Allwine, Melanie |
title |
The Unfairness of (Poverty) Targets |
title_short |
The Unfairness of (Poverty) Targets |
title_full |
The Unfairness of (Poverty) Targets |
title_fullStr |
The Unfairness of (Poverty) Targets |
title_full_unstemmed |
The Unfairness of (Poverty) Targets |
title_sort |
unfairness of (poverty) targets |
publisher |
World Bank, Washington, DC |
publishDate |
2013 |
url |
http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2013/02/17288977/unfairness-poverty-targets http://hdl.handle.net/10986/13159 |
_version_ |
1764422834127372288 |