Working Paper No.690
05 October 2011
The Measurement of Time and Income Poverty
Official poverty thresholds are based on the implicit assumption that the household with poverty-level income possesses sufficient time for household production to enable it to reproduce itself as a unit. Several authors have questioned the validity of the assumption and explored alternative methods to account for time deficits in the measurement of poverty. I critically review the alternative approaches within a unified framework to highlight the commonalities and relative merits of individual approaches. I also propose a two-dimensional, time-income poverty measure that accounts for intrahousehold disparities in the division of household labor and briefly discuss its uses in thinking about antipoverty policies.
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Associated Programs
- Gender Equality and the Economy
- The Distribution of Income and Wealth
- The Levy Institute Measure of Time and Income Poverty