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Measuring Economic Insecurity and Vulnerability as Part of Economic Well-Being: Concepts and Context

Lars Osberg

Working Papers from Dalhousie University, Department of Economics

Abstract: Worrying about future economic dangers subtracts from the well-being of individuals, hence measurement of economic insecurity should be part of the measurement of economic well- being. Because risk-averse individuals are worse off if they have to face uninsured economic hazards, and because ‘security’ has been defined as a basic human right, affluent societies have created complex systems of private insurance and public social protection to reduce the costs of economic hazards. However, the citizens of poor nations (i.e. most of humanity) typically find both private insurance and public social protection to be largely unavailable – their lives are both poorer and riskier. How should one measure the impact on well-being of economic insecurity and vulnerability in these very different contexts? In recent years, economic insecurity has been discussed by several authors (e.g. Bossert and d’Ambrosio (2009), Osberg (2009)). The “vulnerability” perspective on economic development (e.g. Dercon, 2005a, b) has also emphasized both the costs of unprotected hazards to individuals and the adverse implications for growth of the risk-avoidance strategies available to them. Unfortunately, the ‘economic insecurity’ and ‘vulnerability’ literatures have evolved in remarkable mutual isolation – Section 1 begins with a conceptual comparison and a discussion of the implications for measurement choices. Section 2 illustrates the measurement of economic insecurity and its importance to trends in relative economic well-being using OECD data on seven affluent countries since 1980. Section 3 then asks how one might estimate the level of economic security in a comparable way in the very different context of poor nations, and uses data from Tanzania in 2006-07 to illustrate that meaningful comparisons are possible. Section 4 concludes.

Pages: 44 pages
Date: 2010-07-27
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Citations: View citations in EconPapers (10)

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