Estimation of poverty transition matrices with noisy data
Nayoung Lee; Geert Ridder; John Strauss
This paper investigates potential measurement error biases in estimated poverty transition matrices. We compare transition matrices based on survey expenditure data to transition matrices based on measurement-error-free simulated expenditure. The simulation model uses estimates that correct for measurement error in expenditure. This dynamic model needs error-free initial conditions that can not be derived from these estimates. We provide bounds on the initial-conditions parameters, when these initial conditions are obtained by projection, and we also obtain initial conditions on the assumption that there is no time-constant measurement error. We find that for both estimates of the initial conditions measurement error in expenditure data magnifies economic mobility in and out of poverty. Roughly 44% of households initially in poverty at time t1 are found to be out of poverty at time t using expenditure data from the Korean Labor and Income Panel Study (KLIPS). However, when we remove measurement error through a model-based simulation, only between 32 and 40% of households initially in poverty are found to be out of poverty. -- Measurement error ; Economic mobility ; Transition matrix.
Arbeitspapier ; Working Paper ; Graue Literatur ; Non-commercial literature
Language:
English
Other identifiers:
hdl:10419/176059 [Handle]
Classification:
C81 - Methodology for Collecting, Estimating, and Organizing Microeconomic Data ; I32 - Measurement and Analysis of Poverty ; O15 - Human Resources; Income Distribution; Migration