Systemic Poverty Measure
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
A Systemic Poverty Measure is a structural poverty measure that characterizes poverty embedded in social systems and economic structures.
- AKA: Structural Poverty Measure, Institutional Poverty Measure, Endemic Poverty Measure, Entrenched Poverty Measure.
- Context:
- It can typically capture Systemic Poverty Factors including institutional barriers, structural inequality, and systemic discrimination.
- It can typically measure Intergenerational Poverty Transmission through poverty persistence and mobility barriers.
- It can typically assess Structural Economic Exclusion from labor markets, credit markets, and asset markets.
- It can typically evaluate Institutional Poverty Traps created by policy failures and market failures.
- It can typically identify Systemic Vulnerability to economic shocks and social crisises.
- ...
- It can often reveal Poverty Reproduction Mechanisms through educational inequality and health disparity.
- It can often demonstrate Spatial Poverty Concentration in disadvantaged regions and marginalized communities.
- It can often indicate Political Poverty Dimensions including political exclusion and power asymmetry.
- It can often expose Cultural Poverty Factors and social exclusion patterns.
- ...
- It can range from being a Mild Systemic Poverty Measure to being a Severe Systemic Poverty Measure, depending on its systemic poverty intensity.
- It can range from being a Local Systemic Poverty Measure to being a National Systemic Poverty Measure, depending on its systemic poverty scope.
- It can range from being a Single-System Poverty Measure to being a Multi-System Poverty Measure, depending on its system coverage.
- It can range from being a Historical Systemic Poverty Measure to being a Contemporary Systemic Poverty Measure, depending on its temporal context.
- It can range from being a Economic Systemic Poverty Measure to being a Social Systemic Poverty Measure, depending on its system focus.
- ...
- It can be analyzed through Poverty System Analysis and structural poverty assessments.
- It can inform Systemic Poverty Interventions and structural reforms.
- It can require Longitudinal Poverty Data and panel surveys.
- It can utilize Poverty Decomposition Methods and causal analysis.
- ...
- Example(s):
- Geographic Systemic Poverty Measures:
- Rural Poverty Measure capturing rural systemic disadvantage.
- Urban Poverty Measure capturing urban systemic exclusion.
- Regional Poverty Measure capturing regional underdevelopment.
- Group-Based Systemic Poverty Measures:
- Racial Poverty Measure capturing racial discrimination effects.
- Gender Poverty Measure capturing gender inequality impacts.
- Caste Poverty Measure capturing caste-based exclusion.
- Indigenous Poverty Measure capturing indigenous marginalization.
- Institutional Systemic Poverty Measures:
- Historical Systemic Poverty Measures:
- Colonial Poverty Measure capturing colonial extraction effects.
- Apartheid Poverty Measure capturing racial segregation impacts.
- Feudal Poverty Measure capturing feudal exploitation.
- Contemporary Systemic Poverty Measures:
- Neoliberal Poverty Measure capturing market reform impacts.
- Globalization Poverty Measure capturing global integration effects.
- Climate Poverty Measure capturing environmental vulnerability.
- ...
- Geographic Systemic Poverty Measures:
- Counter-Example(s):
- Individual Poverty Measure, which focuses on personal circumstances rather than systemic factors.
- Temporary Poverty Measure, which captures short-term hardship rather than structural conditions.
- Voluntary Poverty Measure, which assesses chosen simplicity rather than imposed deprivation.
- Cyclical Poverty Measure, which tracks economic cycle effects rather than structural problems.
- See: Poverty Measure, Economic Deprivation Measure, Structural Inequality, Poverty Trap, Social Exclusion, Institutional Discrimination, Economic Structure, Social System, Intergenerational Poverty, Spatial Poverty.