Comment on 'Counting the World's Poor' by Angus Deaton

Deaton s analysis of the problems with poverty counts and suggestions for improvement, including issues needing further research, are based on two distinct stages in counting the poor. At the first or international stage, a world poverty line is se...

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Main Author: Srinivasan, T.N.
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
en_US
Published: Washington, DC: World Bank 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2001/09/17580166/comment-counting-worlds-poor-angus-deaton
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/17132
id okr-10986-17132
recordtype oai_dc
spelling okr-10986-171322021-04-23T14:03:29Z Comment on 'Counting the World's Poor' by Angus Deaton Srinivasan, T.N. AGRICULTURAL LABORERS AGRICULTURAL WORKERS COMPETITIVE MARKETS CONSUMER EXPENDITURE CONSUMER PRICE INDEX CONSUMER PRICE INDEXES CONSUMPTION EXPENDITURE CONSUMPTION EXPENDITURES CONSUMPTION POVERTY CONVERSIONS CUMULATIVE DISTRIBUTION DETERMINANTS OF POVERTY DEVELOPING COUNTRIES DIMENSIONS OF POVERTY DURABLES ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT ECONOMIC GROWTH ECONOMICS ESTIMATES OF POVERTY EXCHANGE RATE EXCHANGE RATES FOOD CONSUMPTION GLOBAL POVERTY GROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCT HEADCOUNT RATIO HOUSEHOLD CONSUMPTION HOUSEHOLD INCOME HOUSEHOLD SURVEYS HUMAN DEVELOPMENT HUMAN DEVELOPMENT INDEX HUMAN DEVELOPMENT REPORT HUMAN POVERTY HUMAN POVERTY INDEX INCIDENCE OF POVERTY INDICATORS OF POVERTY INFLATION INTERNATIONAL AGENCIES INTERNATIONAL BANK INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT INTERNATIONAL POVERTY LINE INTERNATIONAL TRADE LABOR MARKETS LEGAL SYSTEMS LOCAL CURRENCY LOW-INCOME COUNTRIES MARKET PRICE MEAN EXPENDITURE NATIONAL ACCOUNTS NATIONAL POVERTY NATIONAL POVERTY LINE NATIONAL POVERTY LINES NUTRITION POLICY IMPLICATIONS POOR POOR COUNTRIES POOR HOUSEHOLDS POOR PEOPLE POPULOUS COUNTRIES POVERTY ALLEVIATION POVERTY ANALYSIS POVERTY ESTIMATES POVERTY INDICATOR POVERTY INDICATORS POVERTY LINE POVERTY LINES POVERTY MEASURE POVERTY OUTCOMES POVERTY REDUCTION PRICE CHANGE PRICE CHANGES PUBLIC SECTOR PURCHASING POWER REDUCTION IN POVERTY REDUCTION OF POVERTY REGIONAL POVERTY REGIONAL POVERTY LINES RETURN RURAL RURAL POOR RURAL POVERTY RURAL POVERTY LINE STOCKS TRANSACTION URBAN AREAS VALUATION Deaton s analysis of the problems with poverty counts and suggestions for improvement, including issues needing further research, are based on two distinct stages in counting the poor. At the first or international stage, a world poverty line is set and used to derive comparable poverty lines for each country. At the second or domestic stage, the poverty lines are used to count the number of poor people in each country, and the others are added up over countries. He finds disquieting evidence about both stages of counting. The data for poverty counts in the second stage come from household surveys, whereas data on aggregate economic growth are from National Accounts Statistics (NAS). Deaton finds that in many countries there are large and growing disparities between survey data and national accounts so that there is no consistent empirical basis for conclusions about the extent to which growth reduces poverty. It is scandalous that even after nearly half a century of pursuing national and international programs for the eradication of mass poverty, the empirical foundations for assessing the success or failure of the programs and drawing lessons from them are so weak as to be deemed nonexistent. Abandoning them and focusing on national and subnational poverty analysis that goes beyond headcounts will be the sensible course to follow. The author focuses only on consumption-based poverty lines. The reason is the challenge of defining household income in a theoretically satisfactory manner and collecting data on income based on that definition through household surveys in any country (developed or developing). Deaton (1989) discusses the difficulties in meeting the challenge. Poverty counts based on income-based poverty lines are even more problematic than consumption-based ones. 2014-02-20T23:18:50Z 2014-02-20T23:18:50Z 2001-10 Journal Article http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2001/09/17580166/comment-counting-worlds-poor-angus-deaton World Bank Research Observer http://hdl.handle.net/10986/17132 English en_US CC BY-NC-ND 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/igo/ World Bank Washington, DC: World Bank Publications & Research :: Journal Article Publications & Research
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
en_US
topic AGRICULTURAL LABORERS
AGRICULTURAL WORKERS
COMPETITIVE MARKETS
CONSUMER EXPENDITURE
CONSUMER PRICE INDEX
CONSUMER PRICE INDEXES
CONSUMPTION EXPENDITURE
CONSUMPTION EXPENDITURES
CONSUMPTION POVERTY
CONVERSIONS
CUMULATIVE DISTRIBUTION
DETERMINANTS OF POVERTY
DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
DIMENSIONS OF POVERTY
DURABLES
ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
ECONOMIC GROWTH
ECONOMICS
ESTIMATES OF POVERTY
EXCHANGE RATE
EXCHANGE RATES
FOOD CONSUMPTION
GLOBAL POVERTY
GROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCT
HEADCOUNT RATIO
HOUSEHOLD CONSUMPTION
HOUSEHOLD INCOME
HOUSEHOLD SURVEYS
HUMAN DEVELOPMENT
HUMAN DEVELOPMENT INDEX
HUMAN DEVELOPMENT REPORT
HUMAN POVERTY
HUMAN POVERTY INDEX
INCIDENCE OF POVERTY
INDICATORS OF POVERTY
INFLATION
INTERNATIONAL AGENCIES
INTERNATIONAL BANK
INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT
INTERNATIONAL POVERTY LINE
INTERNATIONAL TRADE
LABOR MARKETS
LEGAL SYSTEMS
LOCAL CURRENCY
LOW-INCOME COUNTRIES
MARKET PRICE
MEAN EXPENDITURE
NATIONAL ACCOUNTS
NATIONAL POVERTY
NATIONAL POVERTY LINE
NATIONAL POVERTY LINES
NUTRITION
POLICY IMPLICATIONS
POOR
POOR COUNTRIES
POOR HOUSEHOLDS
POOR PEOPLE
POPULOUS COUNTRIES
POVERTY ALLEVIATION
POVERTY ANALYSIS
POVERTY ESTIMATES
POVERTY INDICATOR
POVERTY INDICATORS
POVERTY LINE
POVERTY LINES
POVERTY MEASURE
POVERTY OUTCOMES
POVERTY REDUCTION
PRICE CHANGE
PRICE CHANGES
PUBLIC SECTOR
PURCHASING POWER
REDUCTION IN POVERTY
REDUCTION OF POVERTY
REGIONAL POVERTY
REGIONAL POVERTY LINES
RETURN
RURAL
RURAL POOR
RURAL POVERTY
RURAL POVERTY LINE
STOCKS
TRANSACTION
URBAN AREAS
VALUATION
spellingShingle AGRICULTURAL LABORERS
AGRICULTURAL WORKERS
COMPETITIVE MARKETS
CONSUMER EXPENDITURE
CONSUMER PRICE INDEX
CONSUMER PRICE INDEXES
CONSUMPTION EXPENDITURE
CONSUMPTION EXPENDITURES
CONSUMPTION POVERTY
CONVERSIONS
CUMULATIVE DISTRIBUTION
DETERMINANTS OF POVERTY
DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
DIMENSIONS OF POVERTY
DURABLES
ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
ECONOMIC GROWTH
ECONOMICS
ESTIMATES OF POVERTY
EXCHANGE RATE
EXCHANGE RATES
FOOD CONSUMPTION
GLOBAL POVERTY
GROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCT
HEADCOUNT RATIO
HOUSEHOLD CONSUMPTION
HOUSEHOLD INCOME
HOUSEHOLD SURVEYS
HUMAN DEVELOPMENT
HUMAN DEVELOPMENT INDEX
HUMAN DEVELOPMENT REPORT
HUMAN POVERTY
HUMAN POVERTY INDEX
INCIDENCE OF POVERTY
INDICATORS OF POVERTY
INFLATION
INTERNATIONAL AGENCIES
INTERNATIONAL BANK
INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT
INTERNATIONAL POVERTY LINE
INTERNATIONAL TRADE
LABOR MARKETS
LEGAL SYSTEMS
LOCAL CURRENCY
LOW-INCOME COUNTRIES
MARKET PRICE
MEAN EXPENDITURE
NATIONAL ACCOUNTS
NATIONAL POVERTY
NATIONAL POVERTY LINE
NATIONAL POVERTY LINES
NUTRITION
POLICY IMPLICATIONS
POOR
POOR COUNTRIES
POOR HOUSEHOLDS
POOR PEOPLE
POPULOUS COUNTRIES
POVERTY ALLEVIATION
POVERTY ANALYSIS
POVERTY ESTIMATES
POVERTY INDICATOR
POVERTY INDICATORS
POVERTY LINE
POVERTY LINES
POVERTY MEASURE
POVERTY OUTCOMES
POVERTY REDUCTION
PRICE CHANGE
PRICE CHANGES
PUBLIC SECTOR
PURCHASING POWER
REDUCTION IN POVERTY
REDUCTION OF POVERTY
REGIONAL POVERTY
REGIONAL POVERTY LINES
RETURN
RURAL
RURAL POOR
RURAL POVERTY
RURAL POVERTY LINE
STOCKS
TRANSACTION
URBAN AREAS
VALUATION
Srinivasan, T.N.
Comment on 'Counting the World's Poor' by Angus Deaton
description Deaton s analysis of the problems with poverty counts and suggestions for improvement, including issues needing further research, are based on two distinct stages in counting the poor. At the first or international stage, a world poverty line is set and used to derive comparable poverty lines for each country. At the second or domestic stage, the poverty lines are used to count the number of poor people in each country, and the others are added up over countries. He finds disquieting evidence about both stages of counting. The data for poverty counts in the second stage come from household surveys, whereas data on aggregate economic growth are from National Accounts Statistics (NAS). Deaton finds that in many countries there are large and growing disparities between survey data and national accounts so that there is no consistent empirical basis for conclusions about the extent to which growth reduces poverty. It is scandalous that even after nearly half a century of pursuing national and international programs for the eradication of mass poverty, the empirical foundations for assessing the success or failure of the programs and drawing lessons from them are so weak as to be deemed nonexistent. Abandoning them and focusing on national and subnational poverty analysis that goes beyond headcounts will be the sensible course to follow. The author focuses only on consumption-based poverty lines. The reason is the challenge of defining household income in a theoretically satisfactory manner and collecting data on income based on that definition through household surveys in any country (developed or developing). Deaton (1989) discusses the difficulties in meeting the challenge. Poverty counts based on income-based poverty lines are even more problematic than consumption-based ones.
format Journal Article
author Srinivasan, T.N.
author_facet Srinivasan, T.N.
author_sort Srinivasan, T.N.
title Comment on 'Counting the World's Poor' by Angus Deaton
title_short Comment on 'Counting the World's Poor' by Angus Deaton
title_full Comment on 'Counting the World's Poor' by Angus Deaton
title_fullStr Comment on 'Counting the World's Poor' by Angus Deaton
title_full_unstemmed Comment on 'Counting the World's Poor' by Angus Deaton
title_sort comment on 'counting the world's poor' by angus deaton
publisher Washington, DC: World Bank
publishDate 2014
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2001/09/17580166/comment-counting-worlds-poor-angus-deaton
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/17132
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