Poverty orderings and intra-household inequality: The lost axiom

Eugenio Peluso, Alain Trannoy

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Abstract

We investigate under which conditions it is possible to infer the evolution of poverty at the individual level from the knowledge of poverty among households. Poverty measurement is approached by the poverty orderings introduced by Foster and Shorrocks (1988). The analysis is based on a reduced form of household bargaining (Peluso and Trannoy, 2007) and provides results in terms of preservation of poverty orderings. We point out the main analogies and differences between inequality and poverty assessment, expressing them in terms of empirically testable conditions. In particular, knowing the change in poverty at the household level is not sufficient to deduce a similar change in poverty at the individual level. We need to know the change in the household income distributions far beyond their poverty line. The focus axiom does not hold in this context.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)24-33
Number of pages10
JournalJournal of Income Distribution
Volume18
Issue number3-4
Publication statusPublished - Sept 2009
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Concavity
  • Focus axiom
  • Intra-household allocation
  • Poverty orderings

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