Inequality, Poverty, and the Intra-Household Allocation of Consumption in Senegal

Article dans une revue: Intra-household inequalities have long been a source of concern for policy design, but there is very little evidence about their effects. The current practice of ignoring inequality within households could lead to an underestimation of both overall inequality and poverty levels, as well as to the misclassification of some individuals with regard to their poverty status. Using a novel survey for Senegal in which consumption data were collected at a disaggregated level, this paper quantifies these various effects. In total, two opposing effects, one on mean and one on inequality, compensate each other in terms of the overall poverty rate, but individual poverty statuses are affected. Intra-household consumption inequalities account for 14 percent of inequality in Senegal. This study has also uncovered the fact that household structure and organization are key correlates of intra-household inequality and individual risk of poverty.

Auteur(s)

Philippe de Vreyer, Sylvie Lambert

Revue
  • World Bank Economic Review
Date de publication
  • 2021
Mots-clés JEL
C81 D13 D31 I32 O12 O15
Mots-clés
  • Inequality
  • Poverty
  • Household surveys
  • Intra-household allocation
  • Senegal
Pages
  • 414-435
Version
  • 1
Volume
  • 35