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Reassessing the econometric measurement of inequality and poverty: toward a cost-of-living approach

Economics

Reassessing the econometric measurement of inequality and poverty: toward a cost-of-living approach

A. Au

This research conducted by Anson Au reveals that traditional measures of poverty and inequality, such as the Gini Index, may conceal the reality of social mobility and actual poverty levels in advanced economies. Using Hong Kong as a case study, it introduces a cost-of-living approach that uncovers a staggering poverty rate much higher than previously recognized, calling attention to a significant number of overlooked households.

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~3 min • Beginner • English
Abstract
The econometric measurement of inequality and poverty in advanced capitalist economies has been preoccupied with aggregate measures of relative deprivation, namely, the Gini Index and a relative poverty rate, both of which are based on economic distances from the population median. Using the case of Hong Kong, this article demonstrates the limitations of relative measures: the Gini Index masks social mobility and the relative poverty line under-states actual poverty. This article argues instead for a cost-of-living approach to measure poverty, where the poverty line is defined as the cost of essential goods and services. A cost-of-living approach produces a poverty line of HK$28,815 and attendant poverty rate of 44.47% in 2020, nearly double the poverty line of HK$13,450 and poverty rate of 23.6% according to the conventional relative measure of the poverty line set to 50% of median household income—capturing a shortfall of 551,400 poor households that have been overlooked by relative measures.
Publisher
Humanities & Social Sciences Communications
Published On
May 11, 2023
Authors
Anson Au
Tags
relative deprivation
Gini Index
poverty
social mobility
cost-of-living
Hong Kong
advanced economies
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