Inequality and Welfare in Quality of Life Among OECD Countries: Non-parametric Treatment of Ordinal Data

被引:0
|
作者
Martyna Kobus
Olga Półchłopek
Gaston Yalonetzky
机构
[1] Polish Academy of Sciences,Institute of Economics
[2] Vistula University,undefined
[3] University of Leeds Business School,undefined
来源
Social Indicators Research | 2019年 / 143卷
关键词
Ordinal data; Quality of life; Inequality and welfare; Partial order; Majorization; Education-happiness gradient; I31; D63;
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中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
The last few years have witnessed an increasing emphasis on going beyond GDP per capita when measuring a nation’s quality of life. Countries (e.g. UK, France, Canada, Germany, Italy, Japan, Korea, Spain) and international organizations (e.g. OECD) have been developing methods suitable for non-income indicators. However, this involves serious measurement challenges due to: (a) multidimensionality, and (b) ordinality (i.e. unlike income these indicators do not have a natural scale). This paper is the first summary of the methods developed in the last decade in the field of inequality and welfare measurement to address these challenges. Next, we utilize the presented methodology and provide evidence on the ranking of OECD countries in terms of welfare and inequality in education and happiness. We find that when dimensions are analysed separately, welfare dominance is frequent (42% of all comparisons in education and 31% in life satisfaction). The number drops to only 4.4% for bivariate dominance, which highlights the empirical relevance of multidimensional analysis. Greece, Portugal and Hungary feature the lowest joint welfare. Northern European countries are most often dominating and Southern European countries are most often dominated in both inequality and welfare analyses.
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页码:201 / 232
页数:31
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