Who cares about relative deprivation ?
Who cares about relative deprivation ?
Rate this book:
About This Book
"Theories of relative deprivation predict negative welfare effects when friends and neighbors become better-off. Other theories point to likely positive benefits. The authors encompass both views within a single model, which motivates their tests using a survey for Malawi that collected data on satisfaction with life, own economic welfare, and the perceived welfare of friends and neighbors. Their methods help address likely biases in past tests found in the literature. In marked contrast to research for industrial countries, the authors find that relative deprivation is generally not a concern for most of their sample, although it does appear to matter to the comparatively well off. Their results provide a welfarist explanation for the priority given to absolute poverty in poor countries. The pattern of externalities also suggests that there will be too much poverty and inequality in this economy, even judged solely from the point of view of aggregate efficiency. "--World Bank web site.
Buy This Book
As an Amazon Associate and Bookshop.org affiliate, BookOrb earns from qualifying purchases.
Write a Review
Sign in to write a review.
More by Martin Ravallion
A poverty-inequality trade-off
A poverty-inequality trade-off?
Appraising workfare programs
Appraising workfare programs
Are the poor protected from bu
Are the poor protected from budget cuts?
Breaking up the collective far
Breaking up the collective farm
Can high-inequality developing
Can high-inequality developing countries escape absolute poverty?
Competing concepts of inequali
Competing concepts of inequality in the globalization debate