2015
DOI: 10.2139/ssrn.2701633
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Robust Pro-Poorest Poverty Reduction with Counting Measures: The Anonymous Case

Abstract: When measuring poverty with counting measures, it is worth inquiring into the conditions prompting poverty reduction which not only reduce the average poverty score further but also decrease deprivation inequality among the poor, thereby emphasizing improvements among the poorest of the poor. For comparisons of cross-sectional datasets of the same society in different periods of time (i.e. an anonymous assessment), the literature offers a second-order dominance condition based on reverse generalized Lorenz cur… Show more

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Cited by 2 publications
(5 citation statements)
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“…First order conditions are scarcely found in the literature to prove stability of rankings and to support normative decisions. Recently, second order dominance conditions have been found useful for the case of the AHR (Gallegos et al, 2015), and therefore they are still not widely used. Hasse Diagram Techniques are applied for other composite indicators but to the knowledge of the author they have not been applied to the AHR yet.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…First order conditions are scarcely found in the literature to prove stability of rankings and to support normative decisions. Recently, second order dominance conditions have been found useful for the case of the AHR (Gallegos et al, 2015), and therefore they are still not widely used. Hasse Diagram Techniques are applied for other composite indicators but to the knowledge of the author they have not been applied to the AHR yet.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As the same individual (or household) is not followed over time only performance on the average trends of a country (or region) can be deducted (anonymous case). As a consequence, the time analysis presented in this book is not based on the analysis of transitions nor on the differentiation of chronic and transitory poverty, for which the works of Nicholas et al (2013), Bossert et al (2013), Apablaza and Yalonetzky (2013), , and Gallegos et al (2015) show interesting results.…”
Section: Panel Data Vs Cross Sectional Datamentioning
confidence: 99%
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