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Poverty, Inequality and Development

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Lorenz Curves. Gini Coefficients and Aggregate Measures of Inequality ... International Poverty Line: $1 a day or $2 a day in PPP dollars. Measures of Absolute Poverty ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Poverty, Inequality and Development


1
Poverty, Inequality and Development
  • Todaro Chapter 5

2
Introduction
  • This section is concerned with the problems of
    poverty and highly unequal distributions of
    income
  • Income and asset inequality is only one small
    part of the broader problem of inequality in the
    developing world. Inequalities exist in
  • Power and status
  • Gender
  • Job satisfaction and working conditions
  • Political participation and freedom of choice
  • Education and Health
  • Access to information and Technology

3
Overview
  • Measuring Inequality and Poverty
  • Extent of Inequality in Developing Countries
  • Economic Characteristics of the Poor
  • Rapid Economic Growth and Equitable Distributions
    of Income
  • Problems stemming from Inequality
  • Policies to Reduce Absolute Poverty

4
Measuring Inequality
  • Size Distribution of Income
  • Lorenz Curves
  • Gini Coefficients and Aggregate Measures of
    Inequality
  • Factor Share Distribution of Income

5
Axioms of Inequality Measures
  • Anonymity
  • Scale Independence
  • Population Independence
  • Transfer

6
Size Distribution of Personal Income
  • The incomes of all individuals are arranged in
    ascending order, then the population is divided
    into deciles or quintiles. Then the percentage of
    national income of each group is determined.
  • Kuznets ratio ratio of income received by top
    20 and income received by bottom 40 (From Table
    1 Kuznets ratio 37.16/20.10 1.848).

7
Table 1 Size Distribution of Income
8
Lorenz Curve
  • Graphical representation of the Size Distribution
    of Personal Income.
  • Shows the actual quantitative relationship
    between the percentage of income recipients and
    the percentage of total income they received
    during a given year.
  • With the percentage of income on the Y-axis and
    the percentage of income recipients on the
    X-axis, the diagonal represents perfect equality.
  • The further the Lorenz curve is away from the
    diagonal, the greater the degree of inequality.

9
Figure 1 Using the data from Table 1
10
Gini Coefficient
  • The Gini coefficient is calculated by taking the
    area between the Lorenz curve and the diagonal
    and dividing it by the half-square area in which
    the curve lies.
  • So, a Gini coefficient of 0 would mean perfect
    equality, and a coefficient of 1 would mean
    perfect inequality.
  • Coefficients between 0.50 and 0.70 are considered
    to mean a highly unequal distribution of income.
    Coefficients between 0.20 and 0.35 are considered
    to represent relatively equitable distributions
    of income.
  • Since we are dealing in percentage terms, we can
    compare Gini coefficients across countries.

11
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12
Coefficient of Variation
  • Along with the Gini coefficient, the Coefficient
    of Variation satisfies all four axioms for
    inequality measures.
  • The CV is simply

Standard Deviation of Income
Mean Income
13
Factor Share Distribution of Income
  • Rather than looking at separate individuals, this
    attempts to explain the share of national income
    received by each of the factors of production.
  • It compares labours share of national income
    with that of land, financial and physical
    capital.
  • With free and competitive markets for output and
    the factors of production, each factor should be
    paid according to is contribution to national
    output. However, non-market forces often
    intervene to determine the distribution of factor
    payments.

14
Measuring Absolute Poverty
  • Absolute Poverty the number of people living
    below the minimum level of income needed to
    satisfy basic necessities.
  • International Poverty Line 1 a day or 2 a day
    in PPP dollars.

15
Measures of Absolute Poverty
  • Headcount Index
  • Total Poverty Gap
  • Human Poverty Index
  • Sen-Shorrocks-Thon Index
  • Foster-Greer-Thorbecke Measure (FGT)

16
Axioms of Measures of Poverty
  • Anonymity
  • Population Independence
  • Monotonicity
  • Transfer/Distributional Sensitivity

The Sen index and the FGT index satisfy all four
axioms.
17
Headcount Index
  • N Total Population
  • YP Poverty line income
  • H number of people whose income falls below YP
  • Headcount index is simply H/N.
  • Note that in each country, a local absolute
    poverty line will need to be calculated, taking
    into account a local basket of good which would
    meet basic nutritional requirements, etc.
  • The headcount index does not measure the extent
    to which the poor lie below the poverty line.
  • It also fails the distributional sensitivity and
    monotonicity axioms.

18
Total Poverty Gap
  • Measures the total income needed to raise
    everyone who is below the poverty line to that
    line.
  • Yi poor persons income
  • N Population size
  • H poverty headcount

19
  • On a per capita basis, the average poverty gap
    (APG) is simply TPG/N.
  • To allow for cross-country comparisons, the
    average poverty gap can be normalized by the
    poverty line income to give the normalized
    poverty gap, which is equal to APG/YP.
  • The average income shortfall (AIS) gives the
    average amount by which the income of a poor
    person falls below the poverty line. AIS TPG/H.
    Fails the transfer and monotonicity axioms.
  • normalized income shortfall is simply AIS/YP

20
Human Poverty Index
  • Analogous to the Human Development Index, it goes
    beyond income measures and looks at human poverty
    in three areas of deprivation
  • Life Expectancy
  • Education
  • Economic Provisioning
  • A low HPI is good (smaller percentage of the
    population is deprived), and a high HPI is bad.

21
Sen-Shorrocks-Thon Index
  • The index is a weighted sum of the poverty gap
    ratios of the poor. The decrease with rank order
    in the income distribution so that more weight is
    given to the poverty gap of the poorer
    individuals.

22
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23
Foster-Greer-Thorbecke Measure
  • A poverty measure is said to be decomposable if
    the poverty measure of a group is a weighted
    average of the poverty measures of the
    individuals in the group. An important property
    of decomposable poverty measures is that, ceteris
    paribus, a reduction in the poverty measure of a
    subgroup always decreases poverty of the
    population as a whole. The Headcount Index and
    AIS are both decomposable but fail the transfer
    and monotinicity axioms.
  • The FGT indicator is decomposable and satisfies
    all four axioms

24
where CVP is the coefficient of variation of
income among the poor.
25
The FGT index can be decomposed additively.
Suppose that the population of size N is divided
into M subgroups that we index by g, g 1, ,M.
Let Ng denote the size of group g.
where FGTg is the FGT index for the group g.
26
Generalized FGT
where represents the degree of aversion
to inequality.
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