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Poverty in Europe: How long-term poverty developed following the financial crisis and what drives it
[journal article]
Abstract The purpose of this paper is to provide an update on the development of the long-term relative poverty rate in Europe. We use European Statistics on Income and Living Conditions data (EU-SILC) for 26 European countries between 2009 and 2018. In addition to describing the development of long-term pov... view more
The purpose of this paper is to provide an update on the development of the long-term relative poverty rate in Europe. We use European Statistics on Income and Living Conditions data (EU-SILC) for 26 European countries between 2009 and 2018. In addition to describing the development of long-term poverty, we also analyse the drivers of poverty on the country level via fixed effects panel regression analysis. We are particularly interested in how economic growth, employment rates, social expenditure, and short-term poverty rates are related to long-term poverty. Overall, the results show that long-term poverty has increased in 13 out of 26 countries, but was unchanged or decreased in 13 countries. Gross domestic product growth is not related to the development of long-term poverty. However, we find that male employment and social welfare expenditure reduce poverty rates. Furthermore, short-term poverty is negatively associated with long-term poverty. Hence, short-term poverty and long-term poverty rather substitute than complement each other.... view less
Keywords
EU; poverty; financial crisis; economic growth; employment trend; cause; social expenditures; gross domestic product
Classification
Social Problems
National Economy
Free Keywords
current poverty; fixed effects panel regression; long-term poverty; relative poverty; EU-SILC 2009-2018
Document language
English
Publication Year
2024
Page/Pages
p. 482-494
Journal
International Journal of Social Welfare, 33 (2024) 2
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1111/ijsw.12614
ISSN
1468-2397
Status
Published Version; peer reviewed
Licence
Creative Commons - Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 4.0