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Measurement of poverty, deprivation, and economic mobility [electronic resource] / edited by Thesia I. Garner, Kathleen S. Short.

Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextSeries: Research on economic inequality ; v. 23.Publication details: Bingley, U.K. : Emerald, 2015.Description: 1 online resource (xxvi, 327 p.) : illISBN:
  • 9781785603860 (electronic bk.)
Subject(s): Additional physical formats: No titleDDC classification:
  • 339.46 23
Online resources:
Contents:
Poverty profiles and well-being: panel evidence from Germany / Andrew Clark, Conchita D'Ambrosio, Simone Ghislandi -- Once poor, always poor? Do initial conditions matter? Evidence from the ECHP / Eirini Andriopoulou, Panos Tsakloglou -- Factors associated with poverty and indigence mobility in five Latin American countries / Luis Beccaria, Roxana Maurizio, Gustavo Va⁺ѓzquez, Manuel Espro -- The contribution of income mobility to economic insecurity in the US and Spain during the Great Recession / Olga Canto⁺ѓ, David Ruiz -- The role of skills in understanding low income in Canada / Andrew Heisz, Geranda Notten, Jerry Situ -- Immigrant child poverty: the Achilles Heel of the Scandinavian welfare state / Taryn Galloway, Bjo⁺rn Gustafsson, Peder Pedersen, Torun O⁺sterberg -- Rural poverty and ethnicity in China / Carlos Gradin -- Static and dynamic disparities between monetary and multidimensional poverty measurement: evidence from Vietnam / Van Tran, Sabina Alkire, Stephan Klasen -- Hardship, debt, and income-based poverty measures in the USA / Kathleen Short -- Modelling the joint distribution of income and wealth / Markus Ja⁺ntti, Eva Sierminska, Philippe Van Kerm.
Summary: The papers in Measurement of Poverty, Deprivation, and Economic Mobility represent the most current research on poverty, deprivation, and income mobility. They illustrate the multidimensionality of poverty that is difficult to capture in any one measure. The volume presents state-of-the-art research that is relevant to poverty academics globally. The papers use a variety of methods that measure the persistence of poverty over time and cover numerous countries and circumstances. A selection of papers focus on single countries while others include comparisons of countries. The volume begins with a set of papers that examine particular groups that are most vulnerable to poverty and deprivation in a variety of places. These include measuring the persistence of poverty of immigrant children in Scandinavian countries. Finally the volume concludes with papers that analyze the relationships of two or more measures together to further elucidate what we know if we have only one measure of poverty.
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Includes bibliographical references.

Poverty profiles and well-being: panel evidence from Germany / Andrew Clark, Conchita D'Ambrosio, Simone Ghislandi -- Once poor, always poor? Do initial conditions matter? Evidence from the ECHP / Eirini Andriopoulou, Panos Tsakloglou -- Factors associated with poverty and indigence mobility in five Latin American countries / Luis Beccaria, Roxana Maurizio, Gustavo Va⁺ѓzquez, Manuel Espro -- The contribution of income mobility to economic insecurity in the US and Spain during the Great Recession / Olga Canto⁺ѓ, David Ruiz -- The role of skills in understanding low income in Canada / Andrew Heisz, Geranda Notten, Jerry Situ -- Immigrant child poverty: the Achilles Heel of the Scandinavian welfare state / Taryn Galloway, Bjo⁺rn Gustafsson, Peder Pedersen, Torun O⁺sterberg -- Rural poverty and ethnicity in China / Carlos Gradin -- Static and dynamic disparities between monetary and multidimensional poverty measurement: evidence from Vietnam / Van Tran, Sabina Alkire, Stephan Klasen -- Hardship, debt, and income-based poverty measures in the USA / Kathleen Short -- Modelling the joint distribution of income and wealth / Markus Ja⁺ntti, Eva Sierminska, Philippe Van Kerm.

The papers in Measurement of Poverty, Deprivation, and Economic Mobility represent the most current research on poverty, deprivation, and income mobility. They illustrate the multidimensionality of poverty that is difficult to capture in any one measure. The volume presents state-of-the-art research that is relevant to poverty academics globally. The papers use a variety of methods that measure the persistence of poverty over time and cover numerous countries and circumstances. A selection of papers focus on single countries while others include comparisons of countries. The volume begins with a set of papers that examine particular groups that are most vulnerable to poverty and deprivation in a variety of places. These include measuring the persistence of poverty of immigrant children in Scandinavian countries. Finally the volume concludes with papers that analyze the relationships of two or more measures together to further elucidate what we know if we have only one measure of poverty.