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Research on Economic Inequality: Poverty, Inequality and Shocks [Kõva köide]

Edited by (Queen Mary University of London, UK)
  • Formaat: Hardback, 312 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 229x152x22 mm, kaal: 561 g
  • Sari: Research on Economic Inequality
  • Ilmumisaeg: 02-Dec-2021
  • Kirjastus: Emerald Publishing Limited
  • ISBN-10: 1800715587
  • ISBN-13: 9781800715585
  • Formaat: Hardback, 312 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 229x152x22 mm, kaal: 561 g
  • Sari: Research on Economic Inequality
  • Ilmumisaeg: 02-Dec-2021
  • Kirjastus: Emerald Publishing Limited
  • ISBN-10: 1800715587
  • ISBN-13: 9781800715585
This volume offers 11 chapters by researchers from around the world, who outline new methods to measure poverty, inequality, and well-being in the context of economic shocks. They discuss using scale independent instruments to measure levels of well-being and inequalities; using Bayesian inference for parametric growth incidence curves; measuring the probability of being poor in terms of factors that cause poverty; measuring poverty when presented with ordinal variables, such as self-assessed health; issues faced by researchers when measuring inequality with ordered categorical data; measuring the inclusiveness of growth using the multidimensional poverty index for Indian states; measuring pro-middle class growth using innovations in the literature of intermediate polarization; analyzing the dynamics of mobility in Chile; and the impact of COVID-19 on households in Europe and Argentina. Distributed in North America by Turpin Distribution. Annotation ©2022 Ringgold, Inc., Portland, OR (protoview.com)

This volume of Research on Economic Inequality contains research on how we measure poverty, inequality and welfare and how these measurements contribute towards policies for social mobility. The volume contains eleven papers, some of which focus on the uneven impact of the Covid-19 pandemic on poverty and welfare.

Opening with debates on theoretical issues that lie at the forefront of the measurement of inequality and poverty literature, the first two chapters go on to propose new methods for measuring wellbeing and inequality in multidimensional categorical environments, and for measuring pro-poor growth in a Bayesian setting. The following three papers present theoretical innovations for measuring poverty and inequality, namely, in estimating the dynamic probability of being poor using a Bayesian approach, and when presented with ordinal variables.

The next three chapters are contributions on empirical methods in the measurement of poverty, inclusive economic growth and mobility, with a focus on India, Israel and a unique longitudinal dataset for Chile. The volume concludes with three chapters exploring the impact of the Covid-19 pandemic as an economic shock on income and wealth poverty in EU countries and in an Argentinian city slum.



This volume of Research on Economic Inequality contains research on how we measure poverty, inequality and welfare and how these measurements contribute towards policies for social mobility. The volume contains eleven papers, some of which focus on the uneven impact of the Covid-19 pandemic on poverty and welfare.



This volume of Research on Economic Inequality contains research on how we measure poverty, inequality and welfare and how these measurements contribute towards policies for social mobility. The volume contains eleven papers, some of which focus on the uneven impact of the Covid-19 pandemic on poverty and welfare. Opening with debates on theoretical issues that lie at the forefront of the measurement of inequality and poverty literature, the first two chapters go on to propose new methods for measuring wellbeing and inequality in multidimensional categorical environments, and for measuring pro-poor growth in a Bayesian setting. The following three papers present theoretical innovations for measuring poverty and inequality, namely, in estimating the dynamic probability of being poor using a Bayesian approach, and when presented with ordinal variables. The next three chapters are contributions on empirical methods in the measurement of poverty, inclusive economic growth and mobility, with a focus on India, Israel and a unique longitudinal dataset for Chile. The volume concludes with three chapters exploring the impact of the Covid-19 pandemic as an economic shock on income and wealth poverty in EU countries and in an Argentinian city slum.
List of Contributors
vii
Introduction 1(4)
Sanghamitra Bandyopadhyay
Chapter 1 Multilateral Wellbeing and Inequality Measurement with Ordered Categorical Data: Health, Consumption and the Aging Process in China
5(26)
Gordon Anderson
Rui Fu
Chapter 2 Bayesian Inference for Parametric Growth Incidence Curves
31(26)
Edwin Fourrier-Nicolai
Michel Lubrano
Chapter 3 Modeling Household Poverty Status Using Repeated Cross-sectional Surveys
57(20)
Maria Grazia Pittau
Roberto Zelli
Saida Ismailakhunova
Chapter 4 On the Measurement of Health Poverty in the Case of Ordinal Variables: The Case of 29 European Countries in 2009 and 2018
77(18)
Pundarik Mukhopadhaya
Jacques Silber
Chapter 5 Maximum Inequality: The Case of Categorical Data
95(10)
Frank A. Cowell
Emmanuel Flachaire
Chapter 6 Multidimensional Poverty and Inclusive Growth in India: An Analysis Using Growth Elasticities and Semi-elasticities
105(34)
Suman Seth
Sabina Alkire
Chapter 7 On the Measurement of Relative, Absolute and Intermediate Pro-middle Class Growth
139(30)
Osnat Peled
Jacques Silber
Chapter 8 Poverty Traps and Affluence Shields: Modeling the Persistence of Income Position in Chile
169(40)
Joaquin Prieto
Chapter 9 Poverty in the COVID-19 Era: Real-time Data Analysis on Five European Countries
209(40)
Giorgia Menta
Chapter 10 The Finances of European Households Throughout the Pandemic
249(20)
Romina Gambacorta
Alfonso Rosolia
Francesca Zanichelli
Chapter 11 The Covid-19 Crisis and Lockdown Measures: A Portrait from a Slum in Urban Argentina
269(28)
Maria Emma Santos
Martin Jose Napal
Gimena Ramos
Index 297
Sanghamitra Bandyopadhyay, FRSA is Reader in Economics and the Deputy Director of the Centre for Globalisation Research at Queen Mary University of London. She specialises in the economics of growth and development and the measurement of inequality and poverty.