Are We Confusing Poverty with Preferences?

Modifying the national poverty line to the context of observed consumption patterns of the poor is becoming popular. A context-specific poverty line would be more consistent with preferences. This paper provides theoretical and empirical evidence t...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: van den Boom, Bart, Halsema, Alex, Molini, Vasco
Format: Working Paper
Language:English
en_US
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2015
Subjects:
YAM
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2015/04/24415505/confusing-poverty-preferences
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/21862
id okr-10986-21862
recordtype oai_dc
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
en_US
topic SANITATION
POVERTY THRESHOLD
EXPENSIVE ITEMS
LIVING STANDARDS
UTILITY CONSISTENCY
RURAL POVERTY THRESHOLD
HOUSEHOLD SIZE
POVERTY LINE
EXPENSIVE FOOD
EXPENSIVE CALORIES
RURAL LINE
RELATIVE PRICE
FOOD CONSUMPTION
BALANCED DIET
INCOME
SCHOOLING
NATIONAL POVERTY LINE
ADMINISTRATIVE REGIONS
NON-FOOD COMPONENT
ECONOMIC REVIEW
DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
NONFOOD ITEMS
FOOD QUALITY
CASSAVA
HOUSING
POLITICAL ECONOMY
WELFARE FUNCTION
POORER REGIONS
REGIONAL DIVERSITY
NATIONAL POVERTY
TOMATOES
POOR PEOPLE
CORRELATION COEFFICIENT
INTERNATIONAL POVERTY LINES
PRICE VECTOR
FOOD CONSUMPTION PER CAPITA
RURAL POOR
SCALAR ADJUSTMENT
NON-FOOD PRICES
REGION
POVERTY REDUCTION
RURAL FOOD
MAIZE
UTILITY-CONSISTENT POVERTY LINE
CEREALS
RURAL HOUSEHOLD
FOOD BASKET
MEASURING POVERTY
RURAL HOUSEHOLDS
DEVELOPMENT ECONOMICS
FOOD POVERTY LINE
HOUSEHOLD HEAD
POOR HOUSEHOLD
FOOD PRICE
INTERNATIONAL POVERTY COMPARISONS
ACCESS TO SAFE DRINKING WATER
POVERTY INCIDENCE
FOOD POVERTY LINES
FOOD REQUIREMENTS
WELFARE LEVEL
POVERTY STATUS
VEGETABLES
CASH INCOME
HOUSEHOLD SURVEYS
POVERTY RANKINGS
CONSISTENT POVERTY
RELATIVE PRICES
WELFARE INDICATORS
URBAN POVERTY LINE
POVERTY PROFILES
HOUSEHOLD MEMBERS
FOOD BUNDLES
FOOD PRODUCTS
NONFOOD COMPONENT
POVERTY PROFILE
BASIC FOODS
HOUSEHOLD HEADS
INDIFFERENCE CURVE
UTILITY-CONSISTENT POVERTY
FOOD ITEMS
RURAL GAP
RURAL POVERTY LINE
POVERTY LINES
STAPLE FOODS
CONSUMPTION
BEEF
HUMAN ENERGY
POVERTY COMPARISONS
CASE STUDY
SPECIFIC POVERTY LINE
FOOD POVERTY
POVERTY MEASUREMENT
BASIC NEEDS
LIVING STANDARDS SURVEY
FOOD COMPONENT
RURAL AREA
EQUIVALENCE SCALES
POLICY MAKERS
PARTICULAR POVERTY LINE
DEVELOPMENT ISSUES
UTILITY FUNCTION
RURAL POVERTY
URBAN AREAS
HOUSEHOLD
FOOD EXPENDITURE
MALNUTRITION
RURAL
NUTRITION
FOOD
UTILITY LEVEL
FOOD DEMAND
SOCIAL WELFARE
EXPENDITURE LEVEL
PROTEINS
GEOGRAPHIC AREAS
TARGETING
ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
DEMAND FOR FOOD
RURAL DIMENSION
CONSISTENT POVERTY LINES
FOOD SHARE
REGIONS
DRINKING WATER
EXTREME POVERTY
CONSUMPTION PATTERNS
RURAL AREAS
POVERTY
MEAT
FOOD BUNDLE
HOUSEHOLD CONSUMPTION
FOOD AVAILABILITY
RICE
HOUSEHOLD NEEDS
HOUSEHOLD EXPENDITURES
HOUSEHOLD WELFARE
NON-FOOD EXPENDITURE
OVERALL POVERTY LINE
POLICY RESEARCH
STARVATION
POVERTY RATE
REDUCTION OF POVERTY
POOR
POVERTY ASSESSMENT
CONSUMPTION PER CAPITA
FOOD PRICES
POVERTY BASKETS
OFFICIAL POVERTY
POLICY ANALYSIS
POVERTY ASSESSMENTS
FOODS
FOOD ITEM
YAM
RURAL HEADCOUNT
POOR HOUSEHOLDS
spellingShingle SANITATION
POVERTY THRESHOLD
EXPENSIVE ITEMS
LIVING STANDARDS
UTILITY CONSISTENCY
RURAL POVERTY THRESHOLD
HOUSEHOLD SIZE
POVERTY LINE
EXPENSIVE FOOD
EXPENSIVE CALORIES
RURAL LINE
RELATIVE PRICE
FOOD CONSUMPTION
BALANCED DIET
INCOME
SCHOOLING
NATIONAL POVERTY LINE
ADMINISTRATIVE REGIONS
NON-FOOD COMPONENT
ECONOMIC REVIEW
DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
NONFOOD ITEMS
FOOD QUALITY
CASSAVA
HOUSING
POLITICAL ECONOMY
WELFARE FUNCTION
POORER REGIONS
REGIONAL DIVERSITY
NATIONAL POVERTY
TOMATOES
POOR PEOPLE
CORRELATION COEFFICIENT
INTERNATIONAL POVERTY LINES
PRICE VECTOR
FOOD CONSUMPTION PER CAPITA
RURAL POOR
SCALAR ADJUSTMENT
NON-FOOD PRICES
REGION
POVERTY REDUCTION
RURAL FOOD
MAIZE
UTILITY-CONSISTENT POVERTY LINE
CEREALS
RURAL HOUSEHOLD
FOOD BASKET
MEASURING POVERTY
RURAL HOUSEHOLDS
DEVELOPMENT ECONOMICS
FOOD POVERTY LINE
HOUSEHOLD HEAD
POOR HOUSEHOLD
FOOD PRICE
INTERNATIONAL POVERTY COMPARISONS
ACCESS TO SAFE DRINKING WATER
POVERTY INCIDENCE
FOOD POVERTY LINES
FOOD REQUIREMENTS
WELFARE LEVEL
POVERTY STATUS
VEGETABLES
CASH INCOME
HOUSEHOLD SURVEYS
POVERTY RANKINGS
CONSISTENT POVERTY
RELATIVE PRICES
WELFARE INDICATORS
URBAN POVERTY LINE
POVERTY PROFILES
HOUSEHOLD MEMBERS
FOOD BUNDLES
FOOD PRODUCTS
NONFOOD COMPONENT
POVERTY PROFILE
BASIC FOODS
HOUSEHOLD HEADS
INDIFFERENCE CURVE
UTILITY-CONSISTENT POVERTY
FOOD ITEMS
RURAL GAP
RURAL POVERTY LINE
POVERTY LINES
STAPLE FOODS
CONSUMPTION
BEEF
HUMAN ENERGY
POVERTY COMPARISONS
CASE STUDY
SPECIFIC POVERTY LINE
FOOD POVERTY
POVERTY MEASUREMENT
BASIC NEEDS
LIVING STANDARDS SURVEY
FOOD COMPONENT
RURAL AREA
EQUIVALENCE SCALES
POLICY MAKERS
PARTICULAR POVERTY LINE
DEVELOPMENT ISSUES
UTILITY FUNCTION
RURAL POVERTY
URBAN AREAS
HOUSEHOLD
FOOD EXPENDITURE
MALNUTRITION
RURAL
NUTRITION
FOOD
UTILITY LEVEL
FOOD DEMAND
SOCIAL WELFARE
EXPENDITURE LEVEL
PROTEINS
GEOGRAPHIC AREAS
TARGETING
ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
DEMAND FOR FOOD
RURAL DIMENSION
CONSISTENT POVERTY LINES
FOOD SHARE
REGIONS
DRINKING WATER
EXTREME POVERTY
CONSUMPTION PATTERNS
RURAL AREAS
POVERTY
MEAT
FOOD BUNDLE
HOUSEHOLD CONSUMPTION
FOOD AVAILABILITY
RICE
HOUSEHOLD NEEDS
HOUSEHOLD EXPENDITURES
HOUSEHOLD WELFARE
NON-FOOD EXPENDITURE
OVERALL POVERTY LINE
POLICY RESEARCH
STARVATION
POVERTY RATE
REDUCTION OF POVERTY
POOR
POVERTY ASSESSMENT
CONSUMPTION PER CAPITA
FOOD PRICES
POVERTY BASKETS
OFFICIAL POVERTY
POLICY ANALYSIS
POVERTY ASSESSMENTS
FOODS
FOOD ITEM
YAM
RURAL HEADCOUNT
POOR HOUSEHOLDS
van den Boom, Bart
Halsema, Alex
Molini, Vasco
Are We Confusing Poverty with Preferences?
geographic_facet Africa
Ghana
Mozambique
relation Policy Research Working Paper;No. 7247
description Modifying the national poverty line to the context of observed consumption patterns of the poor is becoming popular. A context-specific poverty line would be more consistent with preferences. This paper provides theoretical and empirical evidence that the contrary holds and that the national poverty line is more appropriate for comparing living standards among the poor, at least under prevailing conditions in Mozambique and Ghana. The problem lies in the risk of downscaling the burden associated with cheap-calorie diets and the low nonfood component of the rural poor. The paper illustrates how observed behavior may neither reveal preferences nor detect heterogeneous preferences among the poor. Rather, the consumption pattern is the upshot of the poverty condition itself. Poverty is confused with preferences if observed cheap-calorie diets are seen as a matter of taste, whereas in fact they reflect a lack of means to consume a preferred diet of higher quality, as food Engel curve estimates indicate. Likewise, a smaller nonfood component is not a matter of a particular distaste, but an adaptation to the fact that various nonfood items (such as transport) and basic services (such as electricity and health) are simply absent in rural areas.
format Working Paper
author van den Boom, Bart
Halsema, Alex
Molini, Vasco
author_facet van den Boom, Bart
Halsema, Alex
Molini, Vasco
author_sort van den Boom, Bart
title Are We Confusing Poverty with Preferences?
title_short Are We Confusing Poverty with Preferences?
title_full Are We Confusing Poverty with Preferences?
title_fullStr Are We Confusing Poverty with Preferences?
title_full_unstemmed Are We Confusing Poverty with Preferences?
title_sort are we confusing poverty with preferences?
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2015
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2015/04/24415505/confusing-poverty-preferences
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/21862
_version_ 1764449469122740224
spelling okr-10986-218622021-04-23T14:04:05Z Are We Confusing Poverty with Preferences? van den Boom, Bart Halsema, Alex Molini, Vasco SANITATION POVERTY THRESHOLD EXPENSIVE ITEMS LIVING STANDARDS UTILITY CONSISTENCY RURAL POVERTY THRESHOLD HOUSEHOLD SIZE POVERTY LINE EXPENSIVE FOOD EXPENSIVE CALORIES RURAL LINE RELATIVE PRICE FOOD CONSUMPTION BALANCED DIET INCOME SCHOOLING NATIONAL POVERTY LINE ADMINISTRATIVE REGIONS NON-FOOD COMPONENT ECONOMIC REVIEW DEVELOPING COUNTRIES NONFOOD ITEMS FOOD QUALITY CASSAVA HOUSING POLITICAL ECONOMY WELFARE FUNCTION POORER REGIONS REGIONAL DIVERSITY NATIONAL POVERTY TOMATOES POOR PEOPLE CORRELATION COEFFICIENT INTERNATIONAL POVERTY LINES PRICE VECTOR FOOD CONSUMPTION PER CAPITA RURAL POOR SCALAR ADJUSTMENT NON-FOOD PRICES REGION POVERTY REDUCTION RURAL FOOD MAIZE UTILITY-CONSISTENT POVERTY LINE CEREALS RURAL HOUSEHOLD FOOD BASKET MEASURING POVERTY RURAL HOUSEHOLDS DEVELOPMENT ECONOMICS FOOD POVERTY LINE HOUSEHOLD HEAD POOR HOUSEHOLD FOOD PRICE INTERNATIONAL POVERTY COMPARISONS ACCESS TO SAFE DRINKING WATER POVERTY INCIDENCE FOOD POVERTY LINES FOOD REQUIREMENTS WELFARE LEVEL POVERTY STATUS VEGETABLES CASH INCOME HOUSEHOLD SURVEYS POVERTY RANKINGS CONSISTENT POVERTY RELATIVE PRICES WELFARE INDICATORS URBAN POVERTY LINE POVERTY PROFILES HOUSEHOLD MEMBERS FOOD BUNDLES FOOD PRODUCTS NONFOOD COMPONENT POVERTY PROFILE BASIC FOODS HOUSEHOLD HEADS INDIFFERENCE CURVE UTILITY-CONSISTENT POVERTY FOOD ITEMS RURAL GAP RURAL POVERTY LINE POVERTY LINES STAPLE FOODS CONSUMPTION BEEF HUMAN ENERGY POVERTY COMPARISONS CASE STUDY SPECIFIC POVERTY LINE FOOD POVERTY POVERTY MEASUREMENT BASIC NEEDS LIVING STANDARDS SURVEY FOOD COMPONENT RURAL AREA EQUIVALENCE SCALES POLICY MAKERS PARTICULAR POVERTY LINE DEVELOPMENT ISSUES UTILITY FUNCTION RURAL POVERTY URBAN AREAS HOUSEHOLD FOOD EXPENDITURE MALNUTRITION RURAL NUTRITION FOOD UTILITY LEVEL FOOD DEMAND SOCIAL WELFARE EXPENDITURE LEVEL PROTEINS GEOGRAPHIC AREAS TARGETING ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT DEMAND FOR FOOD RURAL DIMENSION CONSISTENT POVERTY LINES FOOD SHARE REGIONS DRINKING WATER EXTREME POVERTY CONSUMPTION PATTERNS RURAL AREAS POVERTY MEAT FOOD BUNDLE HOUSEHOLD CONSUMPTION FOOD AVAILABILITY RICE HOUSEHOLD NEEDS HOUSEHOLD EXPENDITURES HOUSEHOLD WELFARE NON-FOOD EXPENDITURE OVERALL POVERTY LINE POLICY RESEARCH STARVATION POVERTY RATE REDUCTION OF POVERTY POOR POVERTY ASSESSMENT CONSUMPTION PER CAPITA FOOD PRICES POVERTY BASKETS OFFICIAL POVERTY POLICY ANALYSIS POVERTY ASSESSMENTS FOODS FOOD ITEM YAM RURAL HEADCOUNT POOR HOUSEHOLDS Modifying the national poverty line to the context of observed consumption patterns of the poor is becoming popular. A context-specific poverty line would be more consistent with preferences. This paper provides theoretical and empirical evidence that the contrary holds and that the national poverty line is more appropriate for comparing living standards among the poor, at least under prevailing conditions in Mozambique and Ghana. The problem lies in the risk of downscaling the burden associated with cheap-calorie diets and the low nonfood component of the rural poor. The paper illustrates how observed behavior may neither reveal preferences nor detect heterogeneous preferences among the poor. Rather, the consumption pattern is the upshot of the poverty condition itself. Poverty is confused with preferences if observed cheap-calorie diets are seen as a matter of taste, whereas in fact they reflect a lack of means to consume a preferred diet of higher quality, as food Engel curve estimates indicate. Likewise, a smaller nonfood component is not a matter of a particular distaste, but an adaptation to the fact that various nonfood items (such as transport) and basic services (such as electricity and health) are simply absent in rural areas. 2015-05-07T21:23:27Z 2015-05-07T21:23:27Z 2015-04 Working Paper http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2015/04/24415505/confusing-poverty-preferences http://hdl.handle.net/10986/21862 English en_US Policy Research Working Paper;No. 7247 CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/ World Bank World Bank, Washington, DC Publications & Research Publications & Research :: Policy Research Working Paper Africa Ghana Mozambique