Economic Conditions of Female- headed Households in Taiwan in Comparison to the United States and...

40
Economic Conditions of Female-headed Households in Taiwan in Comparison to the United States and Sweden Some reflections on the measurement of social quality Ozawa, Lee and Wang

Transcript of Economic Conditions of Female- headed Households in Taiwan in Comparison to the United States and...

Page 1: Economic Conditions of Female- headed Households in Taiwan in Comparison to the United States and Sweden Some reflections on the measurement of social.

Economic Conditions of Female-headed Households in Taiwan in Comparison to

the United States and Sweden

Some reflections on the measurement of social quality

Ozawa, Lee and Wang

Page 2: Economic Conditions of Female- headed Households in Taiwan in Comparison to the United States and Sweden Some reflections on the measurement of social.

Source of data

1) The wave 5 of Luxemburg Income Study (LIS)

2) The data was collected around the year of 2000

Page 3: Economic Conditions of Female- headed Households in Taiwan in Comparison to the United States and Sweden Some reflections on the measurement of social.

Source of data

3) 3,544 female-headed households with children under the age of 18

4) U.S.: 2,817 Sweden: 406 Taiwan: 321

Page 4: Economic Conditions of Female- headed Households in Taiwan in Comparison to the United States and Sweden Some reflections on the measurement of social.

Conceptual Framework

1) Poverty rates under different definitions of income

Private income Disposable income=private

income – taxes + public transfers + private transfers

Page 5: Economic Conditions of Female- headed Households in Taiwan in Comparison to the United States and Sweden Some reflections on the measurement of social.

Poverty line: 50% of the median adjusted household income

Page 6: Economic Conditions of Female- headed Households in Taiwan in Comparison to the United States and Sweden Some reflections on the measurement of social.

Conceptual Framework

2) Effects of public transfers & private transfers on poverty reduction

3) Income inequality Private income Disposable income

Page 7: Economic Conditions of Female- headed Households in Taiwan in Comparison to the United States and Sweden Some reflections on the measurement of social.

Conceptual Framework

4) Factors related to poverty status in each country

5) The odds of female-headed households being in poverty among three countries

Page 8: Economic Conditions of Female- headed Households in Taiwan in Comparison to the United States and Sweden Some reflections on the measurement of social.

Conceptual Framework

6) The effect of number of children on the odds of female-headed households being in poverty

7) Implications for the measurement of social quality

Page 9: Economic Conditions of Female- headed Households in Taiwan in Comparison to the United States and Sweden Some reflections on the measurement of social.

Findings

1) Poverty rates under the definition of private income

U.S.: 50% Taiwan: 27% Sweden: 51%

Page 10: Economic Conditions of Female- headed Households in Taiwan in Comparison to the United States and Sweden Some reflections on the measurement of social.

FindingsPoverty rates under the

definition of disposable income

U.S.: 41% Taiwan: 22% Sweden: 9.7%

Page 11: Economic Conditions of Female- headed Households in Taiwan in Comparison to the United States and Sweden Some reflections on the measurement of social.

Findings

2) Effects of public transfers & private transfers on poverty reduction

U.S.: 25% decline in the poverty rate (mainly due to means-tested benefits)

Page 12: Economic Conditions of Female- headed Households in Taiwan in Comparison to the United States and Sweden Some reflections on the measurement of social.

Findings Taiwan: 37% decline in the pove

rty rate (mainly due to private transfers)

Sweden:86% decline in the poverty rate (mainly due to social insurance programs)

Page 13: Economic Conditions of Female- headed Households in Taiwan in Comparison to the United States and Sweden Some reflections on the measurement of social.

Findings

3) Income inequality (Gini) Private income U.S.: 0.491 Taiwan: 0.307 Sweden: 0.494

Page 14: Economic Conditions of Female- headed Households in Taiwan in Comparison to the United States and Sweden Some reflections on the measurement of social.

FindingsDisposable income U.S.: 0.363 Taiwan: 0.280 Sweden: 0.160

Page 15: Economic Conditions of Female- headed Households in Taiwan in Comparison to the United States and Sweden Some reflections on the measurement of social.

Findings

4) Factors related to poverty status in each country

U.S.: number of children under 18, age of youngest child, age, education, marital status, work status

Page 16: Economic Conditions of Female- headed Households in Taiwan in Comparison to the United States and Sweden Some reflections on the measurement of social.

FindingsTaiwan: education, work

statusSweden: age of the youngest

child, marital status, work status

Page 17: Economic Conditions of Female- headed Households in Taiwan in Comparison to the United States and Sweden Some reflections on the measurement of social.

Findings

5) The odds of female-headed households being in poverty among three countries

Compared to Taiwan, female-headed households in Sweden were less likely to be poor.

Page 18: Economic Conditions of Female- headed Households in Taiwan in Comparison to the United States and Sweden Some reflections on the measurement of social.

FindingsCompared to Taiwan, female-he

aded households in the U.S. were more likely to be poor.

Page 19: Economic Conditions of Female- headed Households in Taiwan in Comparison to the United States and Sweden Some reflections on the measurement of social.

Findings

6) The effect of the number of children on the odds of female-headed households being in poverty

In Taiwan, the number of children under 18 did not affect.

Page 20: Economic Conditions of Female- headed Households in Taiwan in Comparison to the United States and Sweden Some reflections on the measurement of social.

FindingsIn Sweden, when the number

of children increased by one, the odds of female-headed household being in poverty decreased by 23%.

Page 21: Economic Conditions of Female- headed Households in Taiwan in Comparison to the United States and Sweden Some reflections on the measurement of social.

FindingsIn the U.S., when the number

of children increased by one, the odds of female-headed household being in poverty increased by 41.6%.

Page 22: Economic Conditions of Female- headed Households in Taiwan in Comparison to the United States and Sweden Some reflections on the measurement of social.

Discussions

1) Before receiving public & private transfers, female-headed households in Taiwan had the lowest poverty rate.

the role of market

Page 23: Economic Conditions of Female- headed Households in Taiwan in Comparison to the United States and Sweden Some reflections on the measurement of social.

Discussions

2) After receiving public & private transfers, female-headed households in Sweden had the lowest poverty rate.

The role of state, especially social insurance programs

Page 24: Economic Conditions of Female- headed Households in Taiwan in Comparison to the United States and Sweden Some reflections on the measurement of social.

Discussions

3) The different effects of public & private transfers on poverty reduction existed in three countries.

Page 25: Economic Conditions of Female- headed Households in Taiwan in Comparison to the United States and Sweden Some reflections on the measurement of social.

DiscussionsU.S.: means-tested programs

Taiwan: family transfers

Sweden: social insurance programs

Page 26: Economic Conditions of Female- headed Households in Taiwan in Comparison to the United States and Sweden Some reflections on the measurement of social.

Discussions

4) The level of poverty rate was related to the level of income inequality.

The country with the lower poverty rate had a more equal income distribution.

Page 27: Economic Conditions of Female- headed Households in Taiwan in Comparison to the United States and Sweden Some reflections on the measurement of social.

Discussions

5) The impacts of life events & human capital on poverty status were different in each country.

U.S.: life events (marriage, raising children), human capital (education, work status)

Page 28: Economic Conditions of Female- headed Households in Taiwan in Comparison to the United States and Sweden Some reflections on the measurement of social.

DiscussionsTaiwan: human capital

(education, work status)Sweden: life events

(marriage, raising children), human capital (work status)

Page 29: Economic Conditions of Female- headed Households in Taiwan in Comparison to the United States and Sweden Some reflections on the measurement of social.

Discussions

6) Adding on more children resulted in a smaller odds of being in poverty in Sweden.

Page 30: Economic Conditions of Female- headed Households in Taiwan in Comparison to the United States and Sweden Some reflections on the measurement of social.

DiscussionsSweden solved the problem

stemming from the existence of children by means of comprehensive systems of income transfers that favors households with children.

Page 31: Economic Conditions of Female- headed Households in Taiwan in Comparison to the United States and Sweden Some reflections on the measurement of social.

Implications for the measurement of social quality

The conditional factor of socio-economic security:

Financial resources• Income sufficiency• Income security

Page 32: Economic Conditions of Female- headed Households in Taiwan in Comparison to the United States and Sweden Some reflections on the measurement of social.

Implications for the measurement of social quality

Work • Employment security• Working conditions

Education• Security of education• Quality of education

Page 33: Economic Conditions of Female- headed Households in Taiwan in Comparison to the United States and Sweden Some reflections on the measurement of social.

Implications for the measurement of social quality

1) Income sufficiency: income-to-needs ratio= household income / poverty

line Suitable for international

comparisons

Page 34: Economic Conditions of Female- headed Households in Taiwan in Comparison to the United States and Sweden Some reflections on the measurement of social.

Implications for the measurement of social quality

2) Income security: poverty rates, income inequality

(ex.Gini): ---the level of economic homogeneity among households

Page 35: Economic Conditions of Female- headed Households in Taiwan in Comparison to the United States and Sweden Some reflections on the measurement of social.

Implications for the measurement of social quality

3) The protection of income security:

Considering other components of the welfare mix, besides state

Taiwan: market, family

Page 36: Economic Conditions of Female- headed Households in Taiwan in Comparison to the United States and Sweden Some reflections on the measurement of social.

Implications for the measurement of social quality

4) The protection of income security:

Considering different types of pubic transfers: means-tested or social insurance programs

Page 37: Economic Conditions of Female- headed Households in Taiwan in Comparison to the United States and Sweden Some reflections on the measurement of social.

Implications for the measurement of social quality

5) Exploring the relationship among the domains:

work, education, financial resources

Page 38: Economic Conditions of Female- headed Households in Taiwan in Comparison to the United States and Sweden Some reflections on the measurement of social.

Implications for the measurement of social quality

6) From a gender perspective, several factors affecting women’s income security need to be considered.

Page 39: Economic Conditions of Female- headed Households in Taiwan in Comparison to the United States and Sweden Some reflections on the measurement of social.

Implications for the measurement of social quality

marital status, age of the youngest child, the number of children (variations among countries)

Page 40: Economic Conditions of Female- headed Households in Taiwan in Comparison to the United States and Sweden Some reflections on the measurement of social.

THANKS FOR YOUR ATTENTION!