The Persistence of Subjective Poverty in Urban Ethiopia
Sammanfattning
Using panel data spanning 15 years, this paper investigates the persistence and correlates of subjective and consumption poverty in urban Ethiopia. Despite the decline in consumption poverty in recent years, which has been linked to rapid economic growth, subjective poverty has remained largely unchanged. Dynamic probit regression results show that households with a history of past poverty continue to perceive themselves as poor even if their material consumption improves. Our results also suggest that the relative economic position of households is a strong determinant of subjective poverty, and having at least some type of employment reduces the likelihood that households will perceive themselves as poor, even if they remain in objective poverty. Receiving remittances from abroad, on the other hand, does not reduce perceived poverty, even if it raises material consumption. We argue that any analysis to measure the impact of growth on welfare should encompass subjective measures as well.<p>
Samlingar
Fil(er)
Datum
2012-12Författare
Alem, Yonas
Köhlin, Gunnar
Stage, Jesper
Nyckelord
Ethiopia
subjective poverty
dynamic probit
Publikationstyp
report
ISSN
1403-2465
Serie/rapportnr.
Working Papers in Economics
549
Språk
eng