What Factors Beyond Economic Poverty Lead People in High-income Societies to Feel Poor? Evidence from Hong Kong

被引:0
作者
Chenhong Peng
Paul S. F. Yip
Yik Wa Law
机构
[1] The University of Hong Kong,Department of Social Work and Social Administration
[2] The University of Hong Kong,HKJC Centre for Suicide Research and Prevention
来源
Social Indicators Research | 2020年 / 152卷
关键词
Subjective poverty; Discrepancies in poverty status; Education; Housing status; Self-rated health;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
In contrast to the economic approach that dominates poverty research, a subjective approach that asks respondents to evaluate their own poverty status offers an insider’s perspective on poverty. However, most studies investigating the factors associated with subjective poverty in high-income societies have failed to disentangle those factors’ effects on subjective poverty from their effects on economic poverty, and most were conducted in Europe. Using data from the two-wave (2015–2017) Hong Kong Panel Survey for Poverty Alleviation (N = 840), this study examined the extent to which the effects on subjective poverty of eight socio-demographic factors (e.g. gender, age, residence status, marital status, educational attainment, employment status, housing status, and self-rated health) are mediated through the dynamics of economic poverty using logistic regression and mediation analysis. The results of logistic regression showed educational attainment, housing status, and self-rated health to be significantly associated with subjective poverty. Mediation analysis revealed that the effects of secondary education and living in public or private rental housing on subjective poverty are not mediated through the dynamics of economic poverty and that only 20.40% of self-rated poor health’s effect is mediated. Our findings thus suggest that solving economic poverty alone is insufficient to tackle the issue of subjective poverty in Hong Kong. Several policy initiatives, including improving the career prospects of the secondary-educated, enhancing the mobility outcomes of public rental tenants, and reducing the rent-to-income ratio of private rental tenants, could contribute to alleviating subjective poverty.
引用
收藏
页码:991 / 1027
页数:36
相关论文
共 149 条
[1]  
Alem Y(2014)The persistence of subjective poverty in urban Ethiopia World Development 56 51-61
[2]  
Köhlin G(2012)The polarizing effect of economic inequality on class identification: Evidence from 44 countries Research in Social Stratification and Mobility 30 129-141
[3]  
Stage J(2011)Housing affordability as a factor in the creation of sustainable environment in developing world: The example of Akure, Nigeria Journal of Human Ecology 35 121-131
[4]  
Andersen R(2017)Are income poverty and perceptions of financial difficulties dynamically interrelated? Journal of Economic Psychology 61 103-114
[5]  
Curtis J(2018)Quality of government and subjective poverty in Europe CESifo Economic Studies 64 371-395
[6]  
Aribigbola A(1986)The moderator-mediator variable distinction in social psychological research: Conceptual, strategic, and statistical considerations Journal of Personality and Social Psychology 51 1173-1182
[7]  
Ayllón S(2008)Determinants of poverty and subjective well-being Social and Economic Studies 57 1-51
[8]  
Fusco A(2006)Economic transition and subjective poverty in urban China Review of Income and Wealth 52 625-641
[9]  
Baldini M(2013)Education, opportunity and the prospects for social mobility British Journal of Sociology of Education 34 678-700
[10]  
Peragine V(2006)Being poor, feeling poorer: Combining objective and subjective measures of welfare in Albania The Journal of Development Studies 42 739-760