Transient, Chronic, and Intergenerational Poverty: Evidence from the Cebu Longitudinal Health and Nutrition Survey

Type Thesis or Dissertation - Master of Arts in Economics
Title Transient, Chronic, and Intergenerational Poverty: Evidence from the Cebu Longitudinal Health and Nutrition Survey
Author(s)
Publication (Day/Month/Year) 2010
URL http://www.pcpd.ph/uploads/products/446810498ad4ab433908bc29fc58e3c6.pdf
Abstract
This paper examines poverty dynamics in the Philippines by decomposing poverty into its
transient and chronic components using censored fluctuation approaches. Findings reveal
that aggregate squared poverty gap is mostly transient. Using censored quantile regression,
the paper then identifies the following as significant correlates of transient poverty: location
of residence, household dependency burden, mother’s age, and work in the farming sector.
Transient poverty is also linked with single-person headed households. Meanwhile,
significant correlates of chronic poverty include work in the farming sector and number of
years of mother’s education Households with heads who are regular wage earners and who
are contractual workers experience more chronic poverty than households with heads who
are self-employed. Once we extend our model to account for intergenerational poverty, we
find that estimated elasticity between parent and child’s income ranges from 0.165 to 0.197
suggesting that moderate income rigidity exists between two generations.

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