4.2.1 Absolute And Relative Poverty ✅ Flashcards
What is absolute poverty? What is its focus?
Absolute poverty is a measure that focuses on a fixed min standard of living basic for survival.
Meeting basic needs to live.
What is relative poverty? What is its focus?
Measure that considers a personas income in comparison to overall standards of living within society.
Concerned with inequality and social exclusion.
What does UN characterise absolute poverty? What is world banks definition?
A condition characterised by severe deprivation of basic needs.
Less than $1.90 a day.
What is more common in developed countries? What is it classified as? How many in uk?
Relative.
Income less than 60% of median income.
1 in 5.
What is the poverty line? What is the poverty trap?
Min standard of income necessary for adequate life in given country.
Effects low income = they are disincentivised to work longer hours due to tax and benefit systems.
What are measures of absolute poverty?
Income approach = poverty line (spec income needed to be hit) + basic needs (assessing whether individuals can afford essentials)
Cost of basic needs = calculating cost of basic of essentials and comparing if individuals can afford.
What are the measures of relative poverty?
Gini coefficient = higher values indicate income inequality (quantified income distribution).
What factors cause changes in absolute and relative poverty?
- Economic.
- Social and demographic.
- Gov policies.
-Global factors.
How do economic factors effect poverty?
- Economic growth can income countries income + reduce relative poverty through providing more goods.
- Rising income inequality can increase relative poverty.
How do social and demographic factors effect poverty?
- Population growth = can strain resources increase absolute poverty.
- Age + gender = vulnerable groups are more prone to poverty due to limited access to education + employment.
How do gov policies effect poverty?
- Social safety nets = effective programs can recuse both poverties through providing support.
- Taxation/redistribution = progressive policies can reduce income inequality therefore relative poverty.
What are global factors that effect poverty?
- Globalisation = changes in trade + investment + labour markets.
- Foreign aid = can reduce absolute poverty in developing countries.
Explain why uk poverty has been growing?
- Inequality in wages = highest paid jobs having larger increases + public sector due to policy of austerity have had low wage increases.
- Wage of richest is 170x av worker v originally 60x.
- De-industrialisation = more lower paying service jobs.
- Growth in underemployment, zero hours, part + temp jobs resulting in lower wages.
- Decline of trade unions (more workers unable to bargain).
- State benefits have fallen. (Taxes more regressive).