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Multidimensional Measurement of Poverty 16 June 2008

OPHI Oxford Poverty & Human Development Initiative Department of International Development Queen Elizabeth House, University of Oxford www.ophi.org.uk. Multidimensional Measurement of Poverty 16 June 2008. India: Dataset. National Family Health survey 2005/6 dataset N= 79,380

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Multidimensional Measurement of Poverty 16 June 2008

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  1. OPHIOxford Poverty & Human Development InitiativeDepartment of International DevelopmentQueen Elizabeth House, University of Oxfordwww.ophi.org.uk Multidimensional Measurement of Poverty 16 June 2008

  2. India: Dataset National Family Health survey 2005/6 dataset N=79,380 We are using the data for rural areas only (N=43,789) Here we are comparing M0 with BPL status, which is available only for rural populations. Later we will compare a different M0 (with empowerment) with national income poverty.

  3. India: Comparisons Comparison Indicators: • Income Poverty Line (drawn from NSS dataset) • Whether or not respondent possesses a ‘Below the Poverty Line (BPL)’ card. (available for rural only) BPL: 13 dimensions, 5 responses 0-4. Aggregate across domains (total score out of 52) and set a poverty cutoff across that by area. 2 criticisms of BPL (2002 BPL Census – proxy targeting): 1) data quality subject to corruption 2) construction of index arbitrary (cardinal, = wts) Jalan & Murgai 07, Sundaram 03 EPW Misclassification of 49% (AP, 75%)

  4. India: Comparison M0 and BPL

  5. Indicators & Cutoffs (from BPL)

  6. % of Households Deprived

  7. H and M0 for different k values

  8. M0 Example: • With equal weights • With k = 4 • Compared to BPL and Income Poverty • Decomposed by State • Decomposed (after k applied) by Dimension

  9. Also, Raj. & HP – BPL quex is accurate AP: Murgai found 75% error in non-poor

  10. Statewise Decomposition – examplesHP: All relatively close (rank -3)AP: BPL>>M0 (rank -12)Rajasthan: M0>>BPL (rank +19)(BPL, not decomposable)

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