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Encyclopedia > Relative poverty

Relative poverty is a poverty measure based on a poor standard of living or a low income relative to the rest of society. Unlike absolute poverty, it does not necessarily imply that physical human necessities of nutrition, health and shelter cannot be met; instead it suggests that the lack of access to many of the goods and services expected by the rest of the contemporary society leads to social exclusion and damaging results for the individuals and families in relative poverty.


Measurements of relative poverty are similar to measurements of social inequality. However, there are often attempts to exclude the relative position of the richest from poverty measurements, so the OECD and European Union often use a poverty line based on 60% of the median equivalised net household income in individual countries: this has the effect of comparing the poorest in each society with those in the middle.


One of the consequences of using relative poverty to judge societies over time is that the poverty line tends to rise as incomes rise. This may be desirable if it reflects a changing social consensus about minimum acceptable standards of living. However, it may be less desirable if it leads to social and economic policies which give such an emphasis to reducing inequality that the cost includes keeping the incomes of the poorest at a lower level than they might have been had an absolute poverty measure been used to guide policy.


See also


  Results from FactBites:
 
BBC NEWS | UK | Poverty ranking is all relative (530 words)
For example, the Unicef ranking shows the child poverty rate in the United States is greater than in Hungary but fails to show that 50% of median income in the year 2000 was $24,000 (£12,282) is the US and $7,000 (£3,582) in Hungary.
But reducing relative poverty of all Britons has been one of the key aims of the Labour government since Tony Blair was elected in 1997.
And falling relative poverty rates in recent years have been attributed to changes such as the introduction of means-tested tax credits and pension credits.
NationMaster - Encyclopedia: Relative poverty (347 words)
Relative poverty is a poverty measure based on a poor standard of living or a low income relative to the rest of society.
Relative poverty is the condition of having fewer resources or less income than others within a society or country, or compared to worldwide averages.
Relative poverty is defined as the minimum economic, social, political and cultural goods needed to maintain an acceptable way of life in a particular society.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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