Economic Deprivation Measure
(Redirected from Economic Hardship Measure)
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
An Economic Deprivation Measure is an economic measure that quantifies resource insufficiency and economic disadvantage in populations.
- AKA: Economic Hardship Measure, Economic Disadvantage Measure, Material Deprivation Measure, Economic Insufficiency Measure.
- Context:
- It can typically measure Resource Scarcity through income insufficiency, asset deficits, and consumption shortfalls.
- It can typically assess Economic Exclusion from markets, financial services, and economic opportunities.
- It can typically capture Material Hardship including housing inadequacy, food insecurity, and utility hardship.
- It can typically evaluate Economic Vulnerability to economic shocks, price increases, and income loss.
- It can typically identify Economic Inequality Effects on living standards and life outcomes.
- ...
- It can often inform Social Policy through needs assessments and resource allocation.
- It can often support Economic Analysis of distribution, welfare, and social justice.
- It can often enable Cross-Population Comparisons and temporal trend analysis.
- It can often reveal Structural Economic Problems and market failures.
- ...
- It can range from being an Absolute Economic Deprivation Measure to being a Relative Economic Deprivation Measure, depending on its measurement standard.
- It can range from being a Monetary Economic Deprivation Measure to being a Non-Monetary Economic Deprivation Measure, depending on its measurement dimension.
- It can range from being a Objective Economic Deprivation Measure to being a Subjective Economic Deprivation Measure, depending on its measurement approach.
- It can range from being a Individual Economic Deprivation Measure to being a Household Economic Deprivation Measure, depending on its measurement unit.
- It can range from being a Short-Term Economic Deprivation Measure to being a Long-Term Economic Deprivation Measure, depending on its temporal scope.
- ...
- It can utilize Economic Surveys, administrative data, and census information.
- It can employ Statistical Methods and econometric techniques.
- It can produce Deprivation Indexes and deprivation scores.
- It can guide Anti-Deprivation Policy and economic interventions.
- ...
- Example(s):
- Poverty Measures:
- Material Hardship Measures:
- Food Insecurity Measure assessing nutritional adequacy.
- Housing Burden Measure evaluating housing affordability.
- Energy Poverty Measure measuring energy access.
- Digital Deprivation Measure assessing digital access.
- Financial Exclusion Measures:
- Banking Exclusion Measure tracking financial service access.
- Credit Constraint Measure evaluating credit availability.
- Asset Poverty Measure measuring wealth deficits.
- Economic Vulnerability Measures:
- Income Volatility Measure tracking income instability.
- Economic Resilience Measure assessing shock recovery.
- Precarity Measure evaluating economic security.
- Regional Economic Deprivation Measures:
- ...
- Counter-Example(s):
- Economic Prosperity Measure, which quantifies economic success rather than deprivation.
- Wealth Measure, which assesses asset accumulation rather than insufficiency.
- Income Measure, which captures earnings without deprivation context.
- Economic Growth Measure, which tracks expansion rather than hardship.
- See: Economic Measure, Poverty Measure, Social Indicator, Welfare Measure, Inequality Measure, Living Standard Measure, Quality of Life Measure, Social Exclusion Measure, Human Development Indicator, Material Hardship Measure.