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Absolute Poverty: When Necessity Displaces Desire

Resource type
Author/contributor
Title
Absolute Poverty: When Necessity Displaces Desire
Abstract
A new basis for an international poverty measurement is proposed based on linear programming for specifying the least cost diet and explicit budgeting for nonfood spending. This approach is superior to the World Bank's $1-a-day line because it is (i) clearly related to survival and well being; (ii) comparable across time and space since the same nutritional requirements are used everywhere while nonfood spending is tailored to climate; (iii) adjusts consumption patterns to local prices; (iv) presents no index number problems since solutions are always in local prices; and (v) requires only readily available information. The new approach implies much more poverty than the World Bank's, especially in Asia.
Publication
American Economic Review
Volume
107
Issue
12
Pages
3690-3721
Date
2017-12
Citation
Allen, R. C. (2017). Absolute Poverty: When Necessity Displaces Desire. American Economic Review, 107, 3690–3721.
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