Niveles de vida en México durante la transición económica: ¿debemos confiar en una línea de pobreza?
Publicado 2002-07-01
Palabras clave
- poder de compra,
- nivel educativo,
- ciclos económicos
Cómo citar
Resumen
Con información de la Encuesta nacional de ingresos y gastos de los hogares se analizan los cambios en los niveles de vida de los hogares en México durante el periodo 1984 - 1994. El estudio basa sus conclusiones en la metodología de dominancia estocástica. Se incorporan mediciones de variación muestral en el gasto per cápita de los hogares y se prueba su significancia con el uso de inferencia estadística no paramétrica. Los resultados sugieren un incremento en el poder de compra de los hogares, siendo aquéllos con un nivel educativo mayor los que presentan una variabilidad más marcada en su gasto, producto de una mayor sensibilidad a los ciclos económicos.
Descargas
Citas
- Anderson, G. (1997). “The Power and Size of Nonparametric Tests for Common Distributional Characteristics II: Omnibus Tests”, Department of Economics, University of Toronto (miemo).
- Anderson, G. (1996). “Non-parametric Tests of Stochastic Dominance in Income Distributions”, Econometrica, 65 (5), pp. 1183-1193.
- Anderson, G. (1995). Nonparametric Tests for Common but Unspecified Population Distributions: A Monte Carlo Comparison, Departament of Economics, University of Toronto (mimeo).
- Anderson, G. (1994). “Simple Tests for Distributional Form”, Journal of Econometrics, 62, pp. 265-276.
- Atkinson, A. B., and F. Bourguingnon (1987). “Income Distribution and Differences in Needs”, in G. R. Feiwel (Ed.), Arrow and the Foundations of the Theory of Economic Policy, MacMillan, New York.
- Bailey, B. J. R. (1977). “Tables of the Bonferroni Statistic”, Journal of the American Statistical Association, 72 (358), pp. 469-478.
- Banco de México (2002). Indicadores Económicas, Dirección de Investigación Económica, México.
- Beach, C. M., and J. Richmond (1985). “Joint Confidence Intervals for Income Shares and Lorenz Curves”, International Economic Review, 26, pp. 439-450.
- Bishop, J. A., Chakraborti, S. and P. D. Thistle (1989). “Asymptotically Distribution –Free Statistical Inference for Generalized Lorenz Curves”, The Review of Economics and Statistics, pp. 725-727.
- Datta, G. and J. Meerman (1980). “Households Income or Household Income Per Capita in Welfare Comparisons”, Review of Income and Wealth, 26(2), pp. 401-418.
- Deaton A. (1997). The Analysis of Household Surveys. A Microeconometric Approach to Development Policy, World Bank, The John Hopkins University Press.
- Engel, E. (1857). “Die productionsund consumtionsverhealtnisse des Koenigreichs Sachen”, in E. Engel (Ed.), Die lebenkosten belgischer arbeiter-familien, Dresden, 1895, C. Heinrich.
- Foster, J. E. (1984). “On Economic Poverty: A Survey of Aggregate Measures”, Advances in Econometrics, 3, pp. 215-251.
- Foster, J. E, J. Greer, and E. Thorbecke (1984). “A Class of Decomposable Poverty Measures”, Econometrica, 52, pp. 761-765.
- Foster, J. E. and A. F: Shorrocks (1988). “Poverty Orderings”, Econometrica, 56, pp. 173-177.
- Hadar J. and R. William (1971). “Stochastic Dominance and Diversification”, Journal of Economic Theory, 3.
- Instituto Nacional de Estadística, Geografía e Informática (INEGI) (1984-1994). Encuesta nacional de ingresos y gastos de los hogares, México.
- INEGI-CEPAL (1993). Magnitud y evolución de la pobreza en México 1984-1992 (informe Metodológico), México, 123 pp.
- Islas, R. and I. Díaz (2001). Mediciones de bienestar: un análisis de sensibilidad, (Bachelor thesis), Universidad Iberoamericana, México.
- Kendall, M. G., and A. Stewart (1987). Kendall´s Advance Theory of Statistics, vol. 1, Oxford University Press.
- Levy, S. (1991). Poverty Alleviation in Mexico, Policy, Research, and External Affairs Working Paper, no. 679, The World Bank.
- Lustig, N., and M. Székely (1997). “México: evolución económica, pobreza y desigualdad”, in Los determinantes de la pobreza en América Latina, Inter American Developing Bank.
- Pollak. R. A., and T. J. Wales (1979). “Welfare comparisons and equivalent scales”, American Economic Review, 69, pp. 216-221.
- Richmond, J. (1982). “A General Method for Constructing Simultaneous Confidence Intervals”, Journal of the American Statistical Association, 77, pp. 455-460.
- Rothbarth, E. (1943). “Note on a Method of Determining Equivalent Income for Families of Different Consumption”, in C. Madge (Ed.), War Time Patterm of Saving and Spending, Occasional Paper, no. 4, London, National Income of Economic and Social Research.
- Savin N. E. (1984). “Multiple Hypothesis Testing”, in Z. Griliches and M. D. Intriligator (Eds.), Handbook of Econometrics, vol. 11, North-Holland.
- Sen, A. (1976). “Poverty: An Ordinal Approach to Measurement”, Econometrica 44, pp. 53-89.
- Shorrocks, A. F. (1983). “Ranking Income Distributions”, Econometrica, 50, pp. 3-17.
- Teruel, G. (1998a). “Changes in the Distribution of Resouerces in Mexico: 1984-1994”, in Distribution of Resources Evidence From Mexico 1984-1994, doctoral dissertation, UCLA.
- Teruel, G. (1998b). “Intrahousehold Alloction of Resources”, in Distribution of Resources Evidence From Mexico 1984-1994, doctoral dissertation, UCLA.
- Tesfatsion L. (1976). “Stochastic Dominance and the Maximization of Expected Utility”, Review of Economic Studies, 43 (2), pp. 301-315.
- Visaria, P. (1980). “Poverty and Living Standards in Asia”, Population and Development Review, 6 (2), pp. 189-223.
- Wolak, F. A. (1987). “An Exact Test for Multiple Inequality and Equality Constraints in the Linear Regression Model”, Journal of the American Statistical Association, 82 (399), pp. 782-793.
- Wolak, F. A. (1989). “Testing Inequality Constraints in Linear Econometric Models”, Journal of Econometrics, 41, pp. 205-235.