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Prices, inequality and poverty: Methodology and Indian evidence

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-01, 10:29 authored by Ankita MishraAnkita Mishra, Ranjan Ray
This paper uses a methodology for evaluating the distributional implications of price movement for inequality and poverty measurement. The methodology is based on a distinction between inequalities in nominal and real expenditure. The conversion of nominal to real expenditure takes into account the varying household preferences. The empirical application to the Indian budget datasets from NSS rounds 50, 55, and 61 shows the usefulness of the proposed procedures. The relative price changes in India have tended to be inequality and poverty reducing as con?rmed by formal statistical tests. The result is robust to expenditure dependent equivalence scales. The progressivity of the relative price changes weakened in the second half of our time period as Fuel and Light overtook the composite group called ¿Miscellaneous¿ in recording the largest price increase. While the poverty rates registered a decline, which was marginal in the urban areas, there was a sharp increase in inequality.

History

Journal

Review of Income and Wealth

Volume

57

Issue

3

Start page

428

End page

448

Total pages

21

Publisher

Wiley-Blackwell Publishing Ltd.

Place published

United Kingdom

Language

English

Copyright

© 2010 The Authors

Former Identifier

2006030183

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2012-02-24

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