Poverty Transitions and Trigger Events across EU Groups of Countries: Evidence from EU-SILC

Author:

POLIN VERONICA,RAITANO MICHELE

Abstract

AbstractThe dynamics of income poverty in European countries have been extensively analysed using the ECHP dataset, run from 1994 to 2001 in the ‘old’ fifteen member states. Using EU-SILC longitudinal data, the purpose of this paper is to update this type of analysis to 2006 by including the ‘new’ EU member states and focusing on poverty mobility. The demographic and economic events associated with households falling into or exiting poverty are analysed through both descriptive analyses and logit regressions. The analysis compares six groups of countries clustered according to welfare regime typologies. The results reveal that most poverty transitions are associated with economic events, but the entry rates after the occurrence of demographic events are also crucial. With respect to poverty entry rates, differences among groups of countries are consistent with their welfare regime typologies, but a less clear ranking among them emerges when considering poverty exit rates and when regressions are estimated while controlling for household characteristics.

Publisher

Cambridge University Press (CUP)

Subject

Management, Monitoring, Policy and Law,Public Administration,Social Sciences (miscellaneous)

Reference33 articles.

1. Damioli G. (2010), ‘How and why the dynamics of poverty differ across European countries’, paper presented at the 31st IARIW General Conference, St Gallen, Switzerland, 22–28 August.

2. Jenkins S. and Van Kerm P. (2011), ‘Patterns of persistent poverty: evidence from EU-SILC’, ISER Working paper no. 30, Institute of Social and Economic Research.

3. Jenkins S. and Rigg A. (2001), ‘The dynamics of poverty in Britain’, Department for Work and Pensions Research Report no. 157.

4. Moving in and out of poverty

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