Title: Measuring
1 - Measuring
- Vulnerability to Poverty
- Cesar Calvo and Stefan Dercon
- Oxford University
2Purpose?
- Develop a welfare concept for policy evaluation
that focuses on downside risk and vulnerability
(1) - Present an axiomatic approach to measure
individual vulnerability to poverty (2) - Explore aggregation issues (3)
- Present elements of a Vulnerability Profile for
Peru, using the approach developed (4) - Inspire a little
3Purpose?
- Part of a larger effort
- To focus on risk as a major cause of poverty and
deprivation (beyond the dimension of a sense of
insecurity). - To argue for policies towards poverty alleviation
that take risk in livelihoods more seriously. - Here looking for a welfare concept that
recognises risk
4A paper in two parts
- In this session motivation, individual and
aggregate measure of vulnerability plus
discussion of empirical issues - In session XV, discussion of the empirical
application, with extension to multidimensional
vulnerability (Cesar Calvo)
51. Vulnerability concept
- Term vulnerability is used as meaning
risk-related vulnerability, whereby risk is
constituting a threat to well-being -
- A THREAT INDUCED BY RISK
61. Vulnerability concept
- PLEASE DONT BE CONFUSED
- Risk-related Vulnerability versus
- Other common meaning of vulnerability as
- state of being helpless or weak,
- as in vulnerable groups.
7Developing a concept
- Policy research puts increased emphasis on
multidimensional achieved outcomes in thinking
about poverty and wellbeing - Measuring incomes, health, education, social
status, etc. - Poverty is failure to secure acceptable living
conditions - BUT, these are EX-POST, devoid of the ex-ante
uncertainty surrounding these outcomes. - OR
- A MISSING DIMENSION THE UNCERTAINTY SURROUNDING
FUTURE OUTCOMES
8Uncertainty matters
- We may want to know about future poverty e.g.
who will be poor? how poor will they be? - Also people dislike uncertainty. The feeling of
insecurity compounds the predicaments of the
poor. - Policy relevance!
- E.g. decisions about interventions
- Which one will be more effective in reducing
poverty? - It will require considering potential outcomes in
different states of the world
9Missing in literature
- Even in Sen (1981), with focus on drought and
shocks leading to famine, the focus is on EX-POST
outcomes , despite allusions - For them a variation of the exchange
relationships can spell ruin. () More modern,
perhaps more vulnerable, certainly.
10Developing a concept
- Lets try to measure an ex-ante concept, before
the veil of uncertainty has been lifted. - We define vulnerability as the threat of future
poverty, and we mean it to relate - (a) to the likelihood of suffering poverty in
the future, and - (b) to the severity of poverty in such a case.
11Vulnerability measurement
- 1st issue?
- Can we design a measure with desirable and
reasonable properties? - a valuation ex-ante of possible welfare
levels, taking into account - -a poverty norm and
- -risk sensitivity
-
12Vulnerability measurement?
- 2nd issue?
- Can we use it for policy-relevant analysis?
empirical application - Needs a forecast model of possible welfare
outcomes - Exploiting as effectively as possible increased
panel data or repeated cross section - Exciting and potentially important research area
132. Axiomatic approach to Vulnerability
- vj v (z, p, yj)
- What properties are desirable?
142. Axiomatic approach to Vulnerability
- Focus axiom we focus only on outcomes (in
particular states) below some norm above the
norm, they are censored at the norm. - downside risk
- Good overall expectations do not imply low
vulnerability. - The threat of future poverty is not reduced by
(ex-ante) - possibilities of being well-off.
- A poor person with 1 probability of winning a
100,000 lottery is as vulnerable as another with
1 chance of winning 10 million.
152. Axiomatic approach to Vulnerability (ctd.)
- Symmetry over states of the world
- Continuity and Differentiability
- Scale invariance in norm and in outcomes
- Probability-dependent effect of outcomes
- changes in outcomes in states with higher
probability have larger effects on vulnerability - Probability Transfer
- vulnerability increases if bad states become
relatively more prevalent - Normalisation (between 0 and 1)
162. Axiomatic approach to Vulnerability (ctd.)
- Risk sensitivity if downside risk increases,
vulnerability increases - Put more structure on risk sensitivity
- constant relative risk sensitivity
- For instance, this could be replaced by constant
absolute risk sensitivity (or any other
conjecture about sensitivity towards risk)
172. Axiomatic approach to Vulnerability (ctd.)
- The only family of measures satisfying all our
axioms is defined by - With while lower a implies higher risk
sensitivity
18Existing vulnerability measures
- Low expected utility (Ligon and Schechter 2003,
Elbers and Gunning 2003) - VLS fails focus axiom
- Expected utility as a normative concept?
- Expected utility as a behavioural concept?
- note we assume LOSS AVERSION AT THE NORM
consistent with evidence from shame experiments
19Existing vulnerability measures
- Expected FGT poverty (Christiaensen and
Subbarao 2004, Kamanou and Morduch 2004) - a0 prob. of being poor
- a1 expected shortfall
- VEP fails Probability Transfer when a0, Risk
Sensitivity when a1, and constant relative risk
sensitivity when agt1 - (in fact, risk sensitivity increases in
consumption for any agt1).
20Discussion of our measure
- People who are certain to be poor are highly
vulnerable. - But some that are not poor at t can be highly
vulnerable - Some of the poor at t may have low vulnerability
213. Aggregating vulnerability
- Individualistic aggregation a society becomes
(more) vulnerable when its individual members are
(more) vulnerable - Non-individualistic view society might not be
indifferent between two scenarios, even if each
individual feels equally vulnerable in either of
them issue of covariance of outcomes in
particular states
223. Aggregating vulnerability
- Individualistic aggregation
- r reflecting inequality aversion
233. Aggregating vulnerability
- Non- Individualistic aggregation
- Threat of widespread poverty versus Threat of
contained poverty - e.g. Sen, on China vs India on average as many
hunger deaths in 1960s, but China mainly during
59-61 and India spread across years. Which is
better?
243. Aggregating vulnerability
- Non-Individualistic aggregation
254. Can we use these measures?
- One needs information about likely distribution
of outcome (health, consumption) - for t1, as seen at t
- Likely to be
- data intensive (statistical models, panel data)
or - data collection intensive (perceptions of risk)
- Use measures to derive profiles
26CONCLUSION How useful?
- Application to Peru shows that currently poor
is not the same as vulnerable - But key contribution is also to highlight that
current poverty measurement is too narrow - Focus on ex-post measurement (realised states
and backward-looking), so ignoring threat and
insecurity - The need to bring risk more to the fore
- Not least since risk-related vulnerability forces
people to take actions that may reinforce poverty
in the long run.