How
Poor Is Too Poor? The West Way And The Millennium
Development Goals
Writers Articles And Opinions
29 August 2010
By David Woodward
The world is on track to meet the first of the
Millennium Development Goals – to halve the number of
people living below the poverty line by 2015. The
trouble is that this line – set at a dollar a day – is
a deeply flawed and unreliable measure of poverty.
How we define poverty is critically important. Poverty
is a moral concept: ‘poor’ is something we consider
that people should not be. So, by setting our poverty
targets according to a particular poverty line, we are
saying that it is quite acceptable for people to live
at that level of income, just as long as they don’t
fall below it.
Millennium Development Goal One defines poverty as
having an income below the dollar-a-day line –
although actually this is now $1.25 per person per
day, at purchasing power parity (PPP), at 2005 prices.
This means that it is an income which would buy the
same as $1.25-a-day in the US in 2005.
This is extraordinarily low by any standards. Living
on $1 (or indeed $1.25) per person per day in the US
or any other developed country would be fairly
unthinkable. A few years ago, I did some rough
calculations to show what a dollar a day would mean in
Britain. In 2006, it was equivalent to 35 people
living on a single minimum wage, with no benefits of
any kind, no gifts, borrowing, scavenging, begging or
savings to draw on (since these are all included as
‘income’ in poverty calculations), and no free health
services or education (since these are not generally
available to the poor).
It is therefore not surprising that living conditions
at this level of income are little short of appalling.
Adam Wagstaff, a World Bank economist, estimated in
2003 that children living at (not below) the
dollar-a-day line in a typical developing country had
between a 1-in-12 and 1-in-6 chance of dying before
their fifth birthday, compared with about 1-in-140 in
developed countries. The great majority of these
deaths are undoubtedly directly or indirectly
poverty-related; and between a third and half of those
who survive are stunted by chronic malnutrition.
Nothing magical
It is difficult to argue that it is morally
acceptable for people to live at this level of income,
so long as they do not fall below it. But this is
exactly what the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs)
imply.
Clearly, the dollar-a-day line is too low; and it is
too low because it is essentially arbitrary. There is
nothing magical about an income of one dollar a day,
and it certainly doesn’t provide any assurance that
people will be able to lead a decent life – or even
survive beyond early childhood. It was originally
picked as the average of the lowest 10 national
poverty lines found in a survey of developing
countries, even though these were themselves set in
different – and in some cases equally arbitrary –
ways. It has gone on being updated in essentially the
same way. The problems with this approach go far
beyond the level of the dollar-a-day line, to the
whole way incomes are calculated in estimating
poverty. So setting the line at $2, $3 or $4 a day
instead, though perhaps more realistic, still wouldn’t
give us a meaningful measure of poverty.
The failure of the current system arises largely from
the use of purchasing power parity (PPP) – or, to be
more precise, from the way it is calculated. In
theory, PPP exchange rates are based on comparing the
prices of the same basket of goods and services in
different countries. This is more sensible than using
a market exchange rate, which would set the poverty
line too high in countries with an under-valued
exchange rate and too low where it is over-valued.
But the PPP exchange rates used are designed for
comparing countries’ national income, not people’s
poverty – so they reflect total spending in the
country, public as well as private. Poor people, by
definition, spend much less than rich people. Even
where they are a large majority of the population,
they have only a small share of total spending. So PPP
exchange rates overwhelmingly reflect the prices of
goods and services bought by non-poor households, most
of which are unaffordable by the poor anyway.
This is particularly problematic because the spending
patterns of poor households differ systematically from
those of the better-off. The poor spend a large
proportion – often a majority – of their incomes on
basic staple foods, which account for a relatively
small proportion of the spending of the better-off,
and therefore of the country as a whole. And the
prices of basic foods vary far less between countries
than other goods, and especially services, which are
consumed more by the better-off. The result is to set
the poverty line at an artificially low level.
The seriousness of this can be demonstrated by the
effects of the 2008 food crisis, when the prices of
basic foods such as maize and rice – on which many
poor households depend – more than doubled in a matter
of months. For a poor household spending half its
income on maize, the effect of doubling its price is
disastrous. There is no money left for anything else.
But if maize represents only, say, five per cent of
total spending in the country, doubling its price will
increase the poverty line by only five per cent. The
poverty line should go up by 50 per cent, but is
actually increased by only five per cent, concealing a
very considerable rise in poverty.
By its nature, the dollar-a-day approach only takes
account of incomes. But this is only one part of what
makes poor people poor. To live on $1 a day with
access to free or affordable health services and
education, and reasonable living environments and
working conditions, is bad enough. Without these
advantages, it is considerably worse. But these are
not reflected in poverty figures, wherever the
threshold is set. The UN Human Development Index and
Human Poverty Index represent a creditable and
worthwhile attempt to fill this gap; but they fall
short of fully resolving the problem. (See box.)
Every decade or so, PPP exchange rates are
recalculated using a later base year. In principle,
this should make no difference to estimates of
poverty, but actually the effects can be dramatic.
Using a base year of 1985, the proportion of people
below the dollar-a-day line in Nigeria in 1993 was
about the same as that in Mauritania. When the base
year was updated to 1993, however, the poverty rate in
Nigeria in the same year was 10 times what it was in
Mauritania. The same updating increased the estimated
level of poverty in sub-Saharan Africa by nearly half
relative to that in Latin America. That a technical
change which should make no difference makes such a
big difference, raises serious doubts about whether
the dollar-a-day estimates are meaningful or reliable
at all.
When the base year is updated, the poverty line is
updated too – however, it is not updated in line with
any measure of price inflation, but (somewhat
arbitrarily) on the basis of national poverty lines.
When the base year was updated from 1993 to 2005, the
dollar-a-day line was reduced by 14 per cent in real
terms, having already been reduced when the base year
was updated from 1985 to 1993. But the estimated level
of poverty at this lower poverty line was half as much
again as had been estimated using the previous higher
line.
If the poverty line had instead been adjusted for
inflation, poverty in 1990 – the starting point of the
MDGs – would have been more than 49 per cent, nearly
double the 28 per cent estimated before the 2008
update. Until two years ago, we thought the MDG was to
halve poverty from 28 per cent. Now it seems, it is to
reduce poverty to 24.5 per cent – only slightly below
the point we thought we had started from.
A better approach
We need a new and better approach to defining and
measuring poverty. First, we need to consider why we
are concerned about poverty. It is not because people
have less than $1 (or indeed $2, $3 or $10) a day – it
is because they do not have enough income to allow
them to live what we would consider a decent (or at
least minimally adequate) life. So our aim should be
to set the poverty line at a level where people can
actually have a standard of living which we would
consider morally acceptable.
Various alternative approaches have been proposed to
deal with these problems – but none resolves them
entirely. Either they rely on applying a single global
poverty line using purchasing power parity, raising
all the problems discussed above; or they depend on
poor people spending their incomes on exactly the
right things (and economists knowing what they are)
and still only meeting their most basic need – an
adequate calorie intake.
I have therefore proposed a new approach, which I have
called the Rights-Based Poverty Line (RBPL). This
moves away from the idea of setting a single global
poverty line, to country-specific lines. But it also
avoids the conventional approach of estimating country
poverty lines according to the cost of a basket of
goods and services considered to be essential.
Instead, the aim is to set poverty lines in each
country which correspond to the same level of outcome
indicators, reflecting health, nutrition, education,
access to water and sanitation, housing, and so on.
This enables us both to link the poverty line to
actual living standards – without making artificial
assumptions about what people will spend their income
on –and to avoid the problem of exchange rates and
purchasing power parity, while maintaining consistency
between countries. The difference is that consistency
will be based on what it means to live at a particular
level of income, and not estimates of spending power
in terms of goods poor people can’t afford anyway.
The starting point is to establish an agreed set of
indicators which reflect economic and social rights –
such as health, nutrition, education – and to set an
agreed minimum level of each indicator that we
consider to be morally acceptable. Based on the
statistical relationship between income and each
indicator in each country, we can then find the income
at which the threshold minimum level is reached (on
average) – and this is set as the poverty line
corresponding with that indicator.
Of course, we need to decide which indicators to use,
and what the threshold level should be for each. But,
in a sense, this is part of the point of the exercise.
Rather than allowing us to make an implicit moral
judgment that a certain income is ‘enough’, without
even considering what it means to live on that income,
it makes us confront the question explicitly: just how
much do we consider to be‘enough’? How poor is ‘too
poor’?
This approach presents a more complex picture than the
single headline numbers generated by the dollar-a-day
system. In each country we have a number of different
poverty lines, corresponding with the indicators we
use; and for each line, we have two important
indicators instead of one – the poverty line itself,
and the proportion of the population below it. We also
have two ways of reducing poverty. Either we can
increase incomes, so that people move above the
poverty line; or we can improve living standards at a
given level of income, so that the poverty line itself
is reduced.
The greater complexity of the RBPL approach can be
seen as an advantage rather than a disadvantage. The
simplicity of the dollar-a-day approach – its greatest
triumph – is also a major limitation. Poverty is a
complex phenomenon, and its nature varies considerably
between different countries and communities. Any
attempt to capture it in a single number will
inevitably be an over-simplification. Neither can it
provide us with a useful tool for policymaking.
The Rights-Based Poverty Line
To tackle poverty effectively, we need an approach
which will capture this complexity, but which we can
make sense of, and relate to our reasons for wanting
to reduce poverty.
The dollar-a-day approach can only tell us if income
poverty is going up or down – and even that it cannot
do reliably. The RBPL approach can give us a great
deal of additional information on the relative
importance of incomes compared with social provision
and other factors, differentiating between different
aspects of living standards – health, education,
nutrition and so on. This, not how many people are
below an arbitrary global poverty line, is the
information needed for priority setting and
decision-making.
Don’t get me wrong – none of this is intended as a
criticism of the economists who originated and
developed the dollar-a-day approach. Not only was this
a very considerable intellectual and technical feat,
but it has had a major political impact in putting
poverty on the global agenda. When it was established
20 years ago, it was the best – indeed the only – tool
we had for measuring poverty. Without it, there would
never have been a Millennium Development Goal to halve
poverty, and global poverty would no doubt have gone
on being almost entirely ignored in international
discussions.
But that was 20 years ago – and over this time, the
weaknesses of the dollar-a-day approach have become
increasingly apparent, without the approach having
been improved to deal with them. It served the purpose
of the time, by putting poverty on the agenda; but now
poverty is on the agenda, we need an approach which
will give us a more reliable and detailed picture of
poverty, so that we can make the right decisions to
try to reduce it. The Rights-Based Poverty Line would
be one way of doing this
David Woodward is a fellow of the London-based New
Economics Foundation. This article is based on How
Poor is ‘Poor’: towards a Rights-Based Poverty Line by
David Woodward and Saamah Adballah. The full report is
released this month and can be seen on
www.neweconomics.org/publications/how-poor-is-poor