scispace - formally typeset
Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Assessing Asset Indices

Deon Filmer, +1 more
- 01 Apr 2008 - 
- Vol. 49, Iss: 1, pp 359-392
TLDR
The analysis shows that inferences about inequalities in education, health care use, fertility, and child mortality, as well as labor market outcomes, are quite robust to the economic status measure used.
Abstract
This paper compares how results using various methods to construct asset indices match results using per capita expenditures. The analysis shows that inferences about inequalities in education, health care use, fertility, child mortality, as well as labor market outcomes are quite robust to the specific economic status measure used. The measures-most significantly per capita expenditures versus the class of asset indices-do not, however, yield identical household rankings. Two factors stand out in predicting the degree of congruence in rankings between per capita expenditures and an asset index. First is the extent to which per capita expenditures can be explained by observed household and community characteristics. In settings with small transitory shocks to expenditure, or with little measurement error in expenditure, the rankings yielded by the alternative approaches are most similar. Second is the extent to which expenditures are dominated by individually consumed goods such as food. Asset indices are typically derived from indicators of goods which are effectively public at the household level, while expenditures are often dominated by food, an almost exclusively private good. In settings where private goods such as food are the main component of expenditures, asset indices and per capita consumption yield the least similar results, although adjusting for economies of scale in household expenditures reconciles the results somewhat.

read more

Content maybe subject to copyright    Report

Citations
More filters
Posted Content

WILDS: A Benchmark of in-the-Wild Distribution Shifts

TL;DR: WILDS is presented, a benchmark of in-the-wild distribution shifts spanning diverse data modalities and applications, and is hoped to encourage the development of general-purpose methods that are anchored to real-world distribution shifts and that work well across different applications and problem settings.
Journal ArticleDOI

Equity in maternal, newborn, and child health interventions in Countdown to 2015: a retrospective review of survey data from 54 countries.

TL;DR: Skilled birth attendant coverage was the least equitable intervention, according to all four summary indices, followed by four or more antenatal care visits, and the most equitable intervention was early initation of breastfeeding.
Journal ArticleDOI

Issues in the construction of wealth indices for the measurement of socio-economic position in low-income countries

TL;DR: The appropriateness of wealth indices as proxies for consumption expenditure is questioned, and the choice of data included had a greater influence on the wealth index than the method used to weight the data.
Journal ArticleDOI

Generating Skilled Self-Employment in Developing Countries: Experimental Evidence from Uganda*

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors study a government program in Uganda designed to help the poor and unemployed become self-employed artisans, increase incomes, and thus promote social stability, and find that the program increases business assets by 57%, work hours by 17%, and earnings by 38%.
Book

Poverty in a Rising Africa

TL;DR: The first part of a two-part volume on poverty in Africa as mentioned in this paper examines progress over the past two decades along both monetary and non-monetary dimensions of poverty, assessing progress in education and health, the extent to which people are free from violence, and the joint occurrence of various types of deprivation.
References
More filters
Book

Principal Component Analysis

TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a graphical representation of data using Principal Component Analysis (PCA) for time series and other non-independent data, as well as a generalization and adaptation of principal component analysis.
Reference EntryDOI

Principal Component Analysis

TL;DR: Principal component analysis (PCA) as discussed by the authors replaces the p original variables by a smaller number, q, of derived variables, the principal components, which are linear combinations of the original variables.
Posted Content

Estimating Wealth Effects without Expenditure Data or Tears: With an Application to Educational Enrollments in States of India

TL;DR: This work estimates the relationship between household wealth and children’s school enrollment in India by constructing a linear index from asset ownership indicators, using principal-components analysis to derive weights, and shows that this index is robust to the assets included, and produces internally coherent results.
MonographDOI

The Analysis of Household Surveys : A Microeconometric Approach to Development Policy

Angus Deaton
TL;DR: Deaton as mentioned in this paper reviewed the analysis of household survey data, including the construction of household surveys, the econometric tools useful for such analysis, and a range of problems in development policy for which this survey analysis can be applied.
Related Papers (5)
Trending Questions (1)
What is the correlation between life expectancy and asset index in different countries and regions?

The provided paper does not mention anything about the correlation between life expectancy and asset index in different countries and regions.