Welfare Dynamics in Colombia [electronic resource] : Results from Synthetic Panels / Balcazar, Carlos Felipe.

By: Balcazar, Carlos FelipeContributor(s): Balcazar, Carlos Felipe | Dang, Hai-Anh | Malasquez, Eduardo | Olivieri, Sergio | Pico, JuliethMaterial type: TextTextPublication details: Washington, D.C. : The World Bank, 2018Description: 1 online resource (42 p.)Subject(s): Access and Equity in Basic Education | Education | Education For All | Educational Populations | Educational Sciences | Gender | Gender and Development | Gender and Education | Inequality | Middle Class | Panel Data | Poverty | Poverty Assessment | Poverty Diagnostics | Poverty Impact Evaluation | Poverty Lines | Poverty Monitoring and Analysis | Poverty Reduction | Small Area Estimation Poverty Maps | Vulnerability | Welfare DynamicsAdditional physical formats: Balcazar, Carlos Felipe.: Welfare Dynamics in Colombia: Results from Synthetic PanelsOnline resources: Click here to access online Abstract: This study explores the short-run transitions between poverty, vulnerability, and middle class, using synthetic panels constructed from multiple rounds of Colombia's Integrated Household Survey (in Spanish Gran Encuesta Integrada de Hogares). The paper reports results from two approaches to define a vulnerability line: the first one employs a nonparametric and parsimonious model, while the second utilizes a fully parametric regression model with covariates. The estimation results suggest a range of between
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This study explores the short-run transitions between poverty, vulnerability, and middle class, using synthetic panels constructed from multiple rounds of Colombia's Integrated Household Survey (in Spanish Gran Encuesta Integrada de Hogares). The paper reports results from two approaches to define a vulnerability line: the first one employs a nonparametric and parsimonious model, while the second utilizes a fully parametric regression model with covariates. The estimation results suggest a range of between to 3 per day per person in 2005 purchasing power parity dollars as the vulnerability line. Using an average daily vulnerability line of 0 per day per person, subsequent estimates on welfare dynamics suggest that, during the past decade, 20 percent of the Colombian population experienced downward mobility, and 24 percent experienced upward mobility. Furthermore, upward mobility increases with higher education levels and is lower for female-headed households.

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