
Prices, price indexes and poverty counts in india during 1980s and 1990s: from cpis to poverty lines?
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PRICES, PRICE INDEXES AND POVERTY COUNTS IN INDIA DURING 1980S AND 1990S: FROM CPIS TO POVERTY LINES? CONTENTS * Abstract * Citation * Links ABSTRACT This paper, the second in a series of
three, examines the calculation of poverty lines using Unit Value Consumer Price Indexes (UV CPIs). We suggest that using UV CPIs to account for temporal change and spatial variation in
prices in the production of poverty lines does not appear to be a good strategy. Here we point out what we see as a flaw in the method used to calculate Poverty Lines for different states
and sectors from a single base Poverty Lines. Further, we argue that neither UV nor official price indexes represent true cost of living indexes because they ignore “environmental” variables
that differ between domains and affect the transformation of consumption into well-being. This results in problems of comparability suggesting that the PLs that can be calculated from
household expenditure surveys such as the NSS CES do not correspond to the same level of well-being in different domains and thus do not generate poverty measures that compare differences in
ill-being rather than differences in the yardstick by which well-being is assessed. A thorough overhaul of poverty line calculations is required, but welfare comparable poverty lines cannot
be based on normative calorie requirements. CITATION Artha Vijnana (2005) XLVII (3-4) 259-286 LINKS Prices, Price Indexes and Poverty Counts in India during 1980s and 1990s: from CPIs to
Poverty Lines? UPDATES TO THIS PAGE Published 1 January 2005 Contents