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Measuring Poverty in a Growing World

Author

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  • Angus Deaton

Abstract

The extent to which growth reduces global poverty has been disputed for 30 years. A major problem is that consumption measured from household surveys, which is used to measure poverty, grows less rapidly than consumption measured in national accounts, in the world as a whole, and in large countries, particularly India, China, and the US. In consequence, measured poverty has fallen less rapidly than appears warranted by measured growth in poor countries. One plausible cause is that richer households are less likely to participate in surveys. But growth in the national accounts is also upwardly biased, and consumption in the national accounts contains large and rapidly growing items that are not consumed by the poor and not included in surveys.

Suggested Citation

  • Angus Deaton, 2015. "Measuring Poverty in a Growing World," Working Papers id:7633, eSocialSciences.
  • Handle: RePEc:ess:wpaper:id:7633
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    Citations

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    Cited by:

    1. Nora Lustig, 2018. "Measuring the Distribution of Household Income, Consumption and Wealth: State of Play and Measurement Challenges," Working Papers 1801, Tulane University, Department of Economics.
    2. Pottier, Antonin, 2022. "Expenditure elasticity and income elasticity of GHG emissions: A survey of literature on household carbon footprint," Ecological Economics, Elsevier, vol. 192(C).
    3. Saroj, Sunil & Pradhan, Mamata & Boss, Ruchira & Roy, Devesh, 2022. "Roles of rural non-farm employment (RNFE) in India: Why RNFE, the conveyor of a shock like COVID 19 is also the key to recovery?," Journal of Asian Economics, Elsevier, vol. 81(C).
    4. Rumman Khan & Oliver Morrissey & Paul Mosley, 2019. "Two Africas? Why Africa’s ‘growth miracle’ has barely reduced poverty," Discussion Papers 2019-08, University of Nottingham, CREDIT.

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