Paper

Developing and Testing Poverty Assessment Tools: Results From Accuracy Tests in Kazakhstan

Have poverty assessment tools been successful in estimating the poverty in Kazakhstan?
Download 100 pages

This paper presents the results of the accuracy tests of poverty assessment tools in Kazakhstan. The paper discusses:

  • The design for the field research of the accuracy test and the computation of the applicable poverty line.
  • The results on selected poverty indicators from 9 regression models. Facts about the models:
    • Each of them potentially represents a newly designed poverty assessment tool;
    • The first 6 models differ with respect to the set of poverty indicators;
    • The seventh model is an example of a tool that considers only those poverty indicators that a survey firm in Kazakhstan rated highly verifiable;
    • The eighth model compiles these indicators with subjective as well as monetary indicators;
    • The last model uses poverty indicators usually available in Living Standards Measurement surveys.
  • The results from an alternative estimation approach, the two-step model.

The paper finds that:

  • All nine models show total accuracy in predicting the percentage of households that actually fall into a given category. However, they show low accuracy among the very-poor and underestimate the poverty headcount;
  • These single-step models are ill-suited for use in Kazakhstan;
  • Model 7 is the most practical model;
  • The inaccuracies in prediction are higher for the very-poor than for the not-very-poor. This problem of unbalanced accuracies can be solved by the use of the two-step models, which is more accurate.

About this Publication

By Zeller, M., Alcarez, V.
Published