foster greer thorbecke

2
Foster Greer Thorbecke From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Jump to: navigation , search The Foster-Greer-Thorbecke (sometimes referred to as FGT) metric is a generalized measure of poverty within an economy [1] . It combines information on the extent of poverty (as measured by the Headcount ratio ), the intensity of poverty (as measured by the Total Poverty Gap ) and inequality among the poor (as measured by the Gini and the coefficient of variation for the poor). FGT measure was developed by Professor Erik Thorbecke , his former student Professor Joel Greer, and another graduate student at Cornell University at the time, Professor James Foster. The formula for the FGT is given by: where z is an agreed upon poverty line (1$ or 2$ per day adjusted for purchasing power parity are the two most common poverty lines used by the World Bank . Developed countries usually have much higher poverty lines), N is the number of people in an economy, H is the number of poor (those with incomes at or below z), y i are individual incomes and α is a "sensitivity" parameter. If α is low then the FGT metric weights all the individuals with incomes below z roughly the same. If α is high, those with the lowest incomes (farthest below z) are given more weight in the measure. The higher the FGT statistic, the more poverty there is in an economy. The FGT measure corresponds to other measures of poverty for particular values of α. For α = 0, the formula reduces to

Upload: anand04935335

Post on 24-Mar-2015

56 views

Category:

Documents


1 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Foster Greer Thorbecke

Foster Greer ThorbeckeFrom Wikipedia, the free encyclopediaJump to: navigation, search

The Foster-Greer-Thorbecke (sometimes referred to as FGT) metric is a generalized measure of poverty within an economy[1] . It combines information on the extent of poverty (as measured by the Headcount ratio), the intensity of poverty (as measured by the Total Poverty Gap) and inequality among the poor (as measured by the Gini and the coefficient of variation for the poor). FGT measure was developed by Professor Erik Thorbecke, his former student Professor Joel Greer, and another graduate student at Cornell University at the time, Professor James Foster.

The formula for the FGT is given by:

where z is an agreed upon poverty line (1$ or 2$ per day adjusted for purchasing power parity are the two most common poverty lines used by the World Bank. Developed countries usually have much higher poverty lines), N is the number of people in an economy, H is the

number of poor (those with incomes at or below z), yi are individual incomes and α is a

"sensitivity" parameter. If α is low then the FGT metric weights all the individuals with

incomes below z roughly the same. If α is high, those with the lowest incomes (farthest

below z) are given more weight in the measure. The higher the FGT statistic, the more poverty there is in an economy.

The FGT measure corresponds to other measures of poverty for particular values of α. For α = 0, the formula reduces to

which is the Headcount ratio, or the fraction of the population which lives below the poverty line. If α = 1 then the formula is

which is the average poverty gap, or the amount of income necessary to bring everyone in poverty right up to the poverty line, divided by total population. This can be thought of as the amount that an average person in the economy would have to contribute in order for poverty to be just barely eliminated.

Page 2: Foster Greer Thorbecke

While the two above versions are widely reported, a good deal of technical literature on poverty uses the α = 2 version of the metric:

as in this form, the index combines information on both poverty and income inequality among the poor. Specifically in this instance the FGT can be rewritten as:

where Cv is the coefficient of variation among those with incomes less than z, H is the total

number of the poor as above, and μ is given by

.

Other decompositions of the index are also possible[2].

The α = 2 version of the index is officially part of the Mexican Constitution as a basis for all government measurements of poverty