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ON INTERMEDIATE HEADCOUNT INDICES OF POVERTY
Author(s) -
Subramanian S.,
Mukherjee Diganta
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
bulletin of economic research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.227
H-Index - 29
eISSN - 1467-8586
pISSN - 0307-3378
DOI - 10.1111/boer.12135
Subject(s) - poverty , economics , population , scrutiny , econometrics , extreme poverty , index (typography) , neglect , preference , demographic economics , statistics , mathematics , demography , economic growth , political science , psychology , sociology , microeconomics , computer science , psychiatry , world wide web , law
The archetypal population‐relative measure of poverty is the Headcount Ratio, while the archetypal population‐absolute measure is the Aggregate Headcount. The overwhelming emphasis in the poverty measurement literature has been on population‐relative measures. The value‐basis for this preference has been seldom submitted to serious scrutiny, with the result that absolute and intermediate measures have generally been subjected to relative neglect. There would appear to be a strong case for the employment of indices which are intermediate between relative and absolute measures, and which avoid the extreme values underlying both. The present note, building on earlier work by scholars such as Arriaga, Krtscha, Del Rio, Alonso‐Villar, Mukherjee, Zheng and Zoli, aims to advance the cause of a workable and plausible population‐intermediate headcount index of poverty.

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