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INTERNATIONAL WORKSHOP Impact of Poverty and Social Exclusion on Children’s Lives and their Well-being 8th – 9th September 2008 Bratislava CHILD POVERTY – A MULTIDIMENSIONAL MEASUREMENT Amélia Bastos School of Economics and Management Technical University of Lisbon Carla Machado School of Economics and Management CEMAPRE CEMAPRE Technical University of Lisbon

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Page 1: INTERNATIONAL WORKSHOP Impact of Poverty and Social Exclusion on Children’s Lives and their Well-being 8th – 9th September 2008 Bratislava CHILD POVERTY

INTERNATIONAL WORKSHOP

Impact of Poverty and Social Exclusion on Children’s Lives and their Well-being

8th – 9th September 2008Bratislava

CHILD POVERTY – A MULTIDIMENSIONAL MEASUREMENT

Amélia Bastos

School of Economics and Management

Technical University of Lisbon

Carla Machado

School of Economics and Management

CEMAPRE CEMAPRE

Technical University of Lisbon

Page 2: INTERNATIONAL WORKSHOP Impact of Poverty and Social Exclusion on Children’s Lives and their Well-being 8th – 9th September 2008 Bratislava CHILD POVERTY

Outline

Motivation

Methodological framework

Results from the empirical analysis

Consequences derived from the principal findings

1

2

3

4

Page 3: INTERNATIONAL WORKSHOP Impact of Poverty and Social Exclusion on Children’s Lives and their Well-being 8th – 9th September 2008 Bratislava CHILD POVERTY

Motivation1

Dimension of child poverty

Consequences of living in poverty for children

Ethics and social justice

Page 4: INTERNATIONAL WORKSHOP Impact of Poverty and Social Exclusion on Children’s Lives and their Well-being 8th – 9th September 2008 Bratislava CHILD POVERTY

Methodological framework – 1/22

Data: 5000 observations

Child – statistical unit of analysis

Child poverty: multidimensional concept

Material and non-material issues

Deprivation – domains: Education, Health, Housing and Social Integration

Fuzzy conceptualization – Fuzzy Set Theory

Page 5: INTERNATIONAL WORKSHOP Impact of Poverty and Social Exclusion on Children’s Lives and their Well-being 8th – 9th September 2008 Bratislava CHILD POVERTY

Methodological framework – 2/22

Measures of child poverty

Composite Index of Deprivation

Risk of Deprivation

Evaluation of socio-demographic and economic attributes – Probit model

Page 6: INTERNATIONAL WORKSHOP Impact of Poverty and Social Exclusion on Children’s Lives and their Well-being 8th – 9th September 2008 Bratislava CHILD POVERTY

3Results from the empirical analysis - 1/3

Composite Index of Deprivation (CID)

Social Integration is the domain that most contributes to child deprivation

Education is on the opposite side

Housing 25,9%

Health25,8%

Education 20,6%

Social Integration

27,7%

Page 7: INTERNATIONAL WORKSHOP Impact of Poverty and Social Exclusion on Children’s Lives and their Well-being 8th – 9th September 2008 Bratislava CHILD POVERTY

Having illiterate parents

CID by socio-demographic attributes emphasizes the importance of:

Being black

Living in lone parent’s families

Living without any of the parents

3Results from the empirical analysis - 2/3

Page 8: INTERNATIONAL WORKSHOP Impact of Poverty and Social Exclusion on Children’s Lives and their Well-being 8th – 9th September 2008 Bratislava CHILD POVERTY

Deprived children: deprivation pattern and attributes evaluation

3Results from the empirical analysis - 3/3

CID by economic attributes emphasizes the importance of:

Living with unemployed parents

Having parents with low professional occupations

Being income poor

Deprivation risk

20% of children are at-risk-of-deprivation

Page 9: INTERNATIONAL WORKSHOP Impact of Poverty and Social Exclusion on Children’s Lives and their Well-being 8th – 9th September 2008 Bratislava CHILD POVERTY

Importance of measures targeted to specific groups

Deprivation and income poverty do not overlap

Importance of the child-cantered analysis

Consequences derived from the principal findings4