Constructing the poverty profile: an illustration of the importance of allowing for household size and composition in the case of Vietnam

Household size and composition are often overlooked when income poverty is measured. This leads to a distorted picture of poverty and lack of understanding of the relationship between household size and poverty. Empirical studies based on household studies in developing countries have virtually alwa...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: White, H, Masset, E
Format: Working paper
Language:English
Published: 2002
Subjects:
_version_ 1797067020534022144
author White, H
Masset, E
author_facet White, H
Masset, E
author_sort White, H
collection OXFORD
description Household size and composition are often overlooked when income poverty is measured. This leads to a distorted picture of poverty and lack of understanding of the relationship between household size and poverty. Empirical studies based on household studies in developing countries have virtually always found that poverty tends to increase with household size. But the findings that large households are poorer is based on the assumption that all individuals consume the same amount, and that two or more persons living together consume the same as if they were living separately. In this paper, the authors analyse two household studies conducted in Vietnam in the 1990s, and show that without making adjustments for household size and composition their results are misleading. Such results overstate the absolute number of Vietnamese poor, and of poor children in particular. At the same time, they understate rural poverty, particularly amongst poorly educated people, ethnic minorities, and female-headed households. The authors thus emphasise the importance of using multiple indicators to obtain accurate data, with particular relevance for Vietnam.
first_indexed 2024-03-06T21:50:18Z
format Working paper
id oxford-uuid:4b061395-8c51-4c27-9d00-6766a652c289
institution University of Oxford
language English
last_indexed 2024-03-06T21:50:18Z
publishDate 2002
record_format dspace
spelling oxford-uuid:4b061395-8c51-4c27-9d00-6766a652c2892022-03-26T15:41:07ZConstructing the poverty profile: an illustration of the importance of allowing for household size and composition in the case of VietnamWorking paperhttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_8042uuid:4b061395-8c51-4c27-9d00-6766a652c289Families,children and childcareDeveloping countriesResearch methodologyPovertyHouseholdsEnglishOxford University Research Archive - Valet2002White, HMasset, EHousehold size and composition are often overlooked when income poverty is measured. This leads to a distorted picture of poverty and lack of understanding of the relationship between household size and poverty. Empirical studies based on household studies in developing countries have virtually always found that poverty tends to increase with household size. But the findings that large households are poorer is based on the assumption that all individuals consume the same amount, and that two or more persons living together consume the same as if they were living separately. In this paper, the authors analyse two household studies conducted in Vietnam in the 1990s, and show that without making adjustments for household size and composition their results are misleading. Such results overstate the absolute number of Vietnamese poor, and of poor children in particular. At the same time, they understate rural poverty, particularly amongst poorly educated people, ethnic minorities, and female-headed households. The authors thus emphasise the importance of using multiple indicators to obtain accurate data, with particular relevance for Vietnam.
spellingShingle Families,children and childcare
Developing countries
Research methodology
Poverty
Households
White, H
Masset, E
Constructing the poverty profile: an illustration of the importance of allowing for household size and composition in the case of Vietnam
title Constructing the poverty profile: an illustration of the importance of allowing for household size and composition in the case of Vietnam
title_full Constructing the poverty profile: an illustration of the importance of allowing for household size and composition in the case of Vietnam
title_fullStr Constructing the poverty profile: an illustration of the importance of allowing for household size and composition in the case of Vietnam
title_full_unstemmed Constructing the poverty profile: an illustration of the importance of allowing for household size and composition in the case of Vietnam
title_short Constructing the poverty profile: an illustration of the importance of allowing for household size and composition in the case of Vietnam
title_sort constructing the poverty profile an illustration of the importance of allowing for household size and composition in the case of vietnam
topic Families,children and childcare
Developing countries
Research methodology
Poverty
Households
work_keys_str_mv AT whiteh constructingthepovertyprofileanillustrationoftheimportanceofallowingforhouseholdsizeandcompositioninthecaseofvietnam
AT massete constructingthepovertyprofileanillustrationoftheimportanceofallowingforhouseholdsizeandcompositioninthecaseofvietnam