Identification of Sources of Variation in Poverty Outcomes

The international community has declared poverty reduction one of the fundamental objectives of development, and therefore a metric for assessing the effectiveness of development interventions. This creates the need for a sound understanding of the fundamental factors that account for observed variations in poverty outcomes either over time or across space. Consistent with the view that such an understanding entails deeper micro empirical work on growth and distributional change, this paper reviews existing decomposition methods that can be used to identify sources of variation in poverty. The maintained hypothesis is that the living standard of an individual is a pay-off from her participation in the life of society. In that sense, individual outcomes depend on endowments, behavior and the circumstances that determine the returns to those endowments in any social transaction. To identify the contribution of each of these factors to changes in poverty, the statistical and structural methods reviewed in this paper all rely on the notion of ceteris paribus variation. This entails the comparison of an observed outcome distribution to a counterfactual obtained by changing one factor at a time while holding all the other factors constant.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Essama-Nssah, B.
Language:English
Published: 2012-01-01
Subjects:ACCOUNTING, AGRICULTURE, BENCHMARK, BUDGET CONSTRAINTS, CDF, COMPETITIVE MARKETS, CONCEPTUAL FRAMEWORK, CONSUMER CHOICE, CONSUMPTION PATTERNS, COUNTERFACTUAL, DECISION MAKING, DEVELOPMENT POLICIES, DEVELOPMENT POLICY, DISPOSABLE INCOME, ECONOMIC ACTIVITY, ECONOMIC GROWTH, ECONOMIC THEORY, ECONOMIC WELFARE, ECONOMICS, ENVIRONMENTS, EXPECTED VALUE, EXPECTED VALUES, EXPENDITURE, FINANCIAL CRISIS, FISHING, FIXED INPUTS, GENERAL EQUILIBRIUM, GINI COEFFICIENT, GROWTH RATE, IMPACT EVALUATION, INCOME, INCOME EFFECT, INCOME EFFECTS, INCOME INEQUALITY, INEQUALITY MEASURES, INTERVENTION, LABOR DEMAND, LABOR ECONOMICS, LABOR FORCE, LABOR MARKET, LABOR SUPPLY, LIVING STANDARDS, LORENZ CURVE, MARGINAL UTILITY, MARGINAL VALUE, MARKET WAGE, MAXIMUM LIKELIHOOD ESTIMATION, NORMAL GOOD, OPPORTUNITY COST, OPTIMIZATION, POLICY INSTRUMENTS, POVERTY MEASURES, POVERTY OUTCOMES, POVERTY REDUCTION, PRICE EFFECT, PRODUCTIVITY, PROGRAMS, REGRESSION ANALYSIS, RELEVANT MARKETS, SAMPLE SIZE, SELECTION BIAS, SUBSTITUTES, SUBSTITUTION, SUPPLY CURVE, SUPPLY FUNCTION, SUPPLY FUNCTIONS, TARGETED INTERVENTIONS, TAX RATES, TECHNOLOGICAL FACTORS, TREATMENT EFFECTS, UNEMPLOYMENT, UTILITY FUNCTION, VARIABLE COSTS, WAGE DISTRIBUTION, WAGE INCOME, WAGE RATES, WAGES, WELFARE FUNCTION,
Online Access:http://www-wds.worldbank.org/external/default/main?menuPK=64187510&pagePK=64193027&piPK=64187937&theSitePK=523679&menuPK=64187510&searchMenuPK=64187283&siteName=WDS&entityID=000158349_20120118105412
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/3238
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