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Are married women more deprived than their husbands?
Author(s)
Date Issued
1996-02
Date Available
2009-04-16T16:05:56Z
Abstract
Conventional methods of analysis of poverty assume resources are shared so that each individual in a household/family has the same standard of living. This paper measures differences between spouses in a large sample in indicators of deprivation of the type used in recent studies of poverty at household level. The quite limited overall imbalance in measured deprivation in favour of husbands suggests that applying such indicators to individuals will not reveal a substantial reservoir of hidden poverty among wives in non-poor households, nor much greater deprivation among women than men in poor households. This points to the need to develop more sensitive indicators of deprivation designed to measure individual living standards and poverty status, which can fit within the framework of traditional poverty research using large samples. It also highlights the need for clarification of the underlying poverty concept.
Type of Material
Working Paper
Publisher
Economic and Social Research Institute
Series
ESRI Working Papers
No. 73
Copyright (Published Version)
Economic and Social Research Institute 1996
Subject – LCSH
Married women--Finance, Personal
Spouses--Economic conditions
Cost and standard of living
Social indicators
Language
English
Status of Item
Not peer reviewed
This item is made available under a Creative Commons License
File(s)
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Name
nolanb_workpap_003.pdf
Size
1.23 MB
Format
Adobe PDF
Checksum (MD5)
c7b0b45051f91d6192118c1cde9648f3
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