Well-being, Poverty, and the Great Recession in the U.S.: A Study in a Multidimensional Framework

Title: Well-being, Poverty, and the Great Recession in the U.S.: A Study in a Multidimensional Framework
Format: Journal Article
Publication Date: February 2019
Published In: Review of Income and Wealth
Description:

We study changes in social well‐being and deprivation in the U.S. during the Great Recession and the subsequent recovery. We outline an analytical framework for measuring well‐being and deprivation in a multidimensional fashion when data on achievement in each dimension is assumed to be ordinal and binary in nature. We use data from the American Community Survey between 2008 and 2015 and find that there was a decline in social well‐being and a rise in social deprivation in the U.S. during the recession followed by a reversal of trends during the recovery. Despite low deprivation levels among the White population, this population experienced the largest increase in deprivation during the recession and the least decline in deprivation in the recovery period. These results underscore the fact that the impact of recession and the subsequent recovery varied significantly across population groups.

External Contributors: Prasanta Pattanaik, Yongsheng Xu
Citation:

Dhongde S., Pattanaik P. and Xu Y. (2019) “Well-being, Poverty, and the Great Recession in the U.S.: A Study in a Multidimensional Framework,” Review of Income and Wealth, Volume 65, Issue S1: S281-S306

Related Departments:
  • School of Economics