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Authordc.contributor.authorBurchi, Francesco 
Authordc.contributor.authorRippin, Nicole 
Authordc.contributor.authorMontenegro Muñoz, Claudio 
Admission datedc.date.accessioned2018-12-19T13:59:15Z
Available datedc.date.available2018-12-19T13:59:15Z
Publication datedc.date.issued2018
Cita de ítemdc.identifier.citationSeries Documentos de Trabajo No. 473, pp. 1 - 54, Noviembre, 2018es_ES
Identifierdc.identifier.urihttps://repositorio.uchile.cl/handle/2250/153420
Abstractdc.description.abstractThe United Nations 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development clearly recognizes that poverty is more than just the lack of a sufficient amount of income. However, some scholars argue that an income-based measure of poverty can sufficiently capture poverty in other dimensions. Unfortunately, the available international indicators of multidimensional poverty suffer from several weaknesses and cannot be directly compared with monetary measures of poverty. This paper provides two main contributions to the literature on poverty measurement and analysis. First, it proposes a theoretically and methodologically sound indicator of multidimensional poverty, called the Global Correlation Sensitive Poverty Index (G-CSPI), which addresses most of the problems present in other poverty indicators. Thanks to the massive I2D2 database of harmonized household surveys, the G-CSPI was calculated for more than 500 surveys, and the results show that it is stable and robust. Second, for the first time we were able to conduct a comparative analysis between income and multidimensional poverty, relying on the same dataset to calculate both. Previous cross-country evidence was based on very different surveys used for the computation of income and multidimensional poverty and even conducted in different years. Building on recent data for 92 countries, our analysis shows that the headcount ratio of extreme monetary poverty (USD1.90) is highly correlated with that of the G-CSPI, but that the relationship is clearly non-linear. Thus, we provided the first empirical evidence of the fact that income poverty is not a sufficiently good proxy for multidimensional poverty.es_ES
Lenguagedc.language.isoenes_ES
Publisherdc.publisherUniversidad de Chile. Facultad de Economía y Negocioses_ES
Type of licensedc.rightsAttribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Chile*
Link to Licensedc.rights.urihttp://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/cl/*
Sourcedc.sourceSeries Documentos de Trabajoes_ES
Títulodc.titleFrom Income Poverty to Multidimensional Poverty: An International Comparisones_ES
Document typedc.typeDocumento de trabajo
Catalogueruchile.catalogadorrcaes_ES


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Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Chile
Except where otherwise noted, this item's license is described as Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Chile