Growth Elasticities of Poverty Reduction

Authors

  • Martin Ravallion Georgetown University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.25071/1874-6322.40545

Keywords:

Poverty measures, growth, inequality, poverty lines

Abstract

Thirty years ago, Nanak Kakwani provided elegant nonparametric formulae
for the point elasticities of poverty measures with respect to changes in
the mean of the distribution, thus analytically linking those measures to
key macroeconomic aggregates. Numerous insights are found in Kakwani’s
elasticities. Rising inequality, measurement errors, discrepancies between
surveys and national accounts, and changing ideas about what ‘poverty’
means are all reasons why the impacts of growth on poverty observed in
practice can be substantially lower than suggested by Kakwani’s elasticities.
These elasticities should not be treated as structural parameters. Rather,
they can vary over time and place in systematic ways.

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Published

2022-10-02

How to Cite

Ravallion, M. (2022). Growth Elasticities of Poverty Reduction. Journal of Income Distribution®, 31(3-4). https://doi.org/10.25071/1874-6322.40545

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