How Small Can You Go? Combining Census and Survey Data for Mapping Poverty in South Africa



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The poverty line is 800 Rands per household. Standard errors in parentheses

Annex Table 2: Headcount Index for The Eastern Cape by Magisterial District


Magisterial District

Headcount ratio

Imputed Mean Household Expenditure

Elliotdale

0.69 (0.0042)

746

Willowvale

0.66 (0.0033)

792

Tabankulu

0.66 (0.0033)

797

Kentani

0.66 (0.0037)

795

Port St Johns

0.65 (0.0041)

853

Mqanduli

0.65 (0.0033)

817

Engcobo

0.65 (0.0028)

832

Flagstaff

0.64 (0.0034)

827

Mt Fletcher

0.64 (0.0032)

809

Ngqueleni

0.64 (0.0030)

833

Cofimvaba

0.64 (0.0033)

840

Libode

0.63 (0.0031)

885

Maluti

0.63 (0.0028)

841

Lusikisiki

0.63 (0.0025)

874

Mt Ayliff

0.62 (0.0038)

861

Tsomo

0.62 (0.0042)

847

Umzimkulu

0.62 (0.0028)

877

Idutywa

0.61 (0.0035)

904

Tsolo

0.61 (0.0033)

901

Mt Frere

0.60 (0.0030)

910

Mpofu

0.60 (0.0085)

908

Bizana

0.59 (0.0026)

923

Qumbu

0.58 (0.0033)

922

Cala

0.58 (0.0046)

982

Nqamakwe

0.58 (0.0037)

918

Keiskammahoek

0.57 (0.0054)

977

Sterkspruit

0.56 (0.0031)

964

Middeldrift

0.53 (0.0048)

995

Lady Frere

0.53 (0.0025)

1116

Pearston

0.52 (0.0127)

1355

Ntabathemba

0.51 (0.0069)

1028

Peddie

0.51 (0.0040)

1062

Komga

0.51 (0.0075)

1589

Barkley-East

0.50 (0.0082)

1554

Umtata

0.49 (0.0018)

1447

Hofmeyer

0.49 (0.0122)

1617

Maclear

0.49 (0.0067)

1568

Lady Grey

0.48 (0.0104)

1573

Stutterheim

0.47 (0.0050)

1556

Bedford

0.47 (0.0086)

1476

Zwelitsha

0.46 (0.0020)

1400

Butterworth

0.46 (0.0029)

1438

Wodehouse

0.46 (0.0079)

1791

Tarka

0.45 (0.0097)

1862

Victoria East

0.44 (0.0043)

1388

Steytlerville

0.44 (0.0117)

1850

Elliot

0.43 (0.0073)

1800

Hewu

0.43 (0.0041)

1261

Steynsburg

0.43 (0.0101)

1707

Alexandria

0.43 (0.0054)

1773

Adelaide

0.43 (0.0074)

1766

Indwe

0.42 (0.0100)

1564

Kirkwood

0.42 (0.0050)

1778

Fort Beaufort

0.41 (0.0059)

1944

Sterkstroom

0.41 (0.0102)

1671

Hankey

0.41 (0.0057)

1794

Jansenville

0.41 (0.0085)

1847

Willowmore

0.40 (0.0084)

1872

Somerset East

0.40 (0.0050)

2037

Bathurst

0.40 (0.0043)

2000

Albert

0.40 (0.0067)

2115

Molteno

0.39 (0.0086)

1803

Cathcart

0.38 (0.0074)

1856

Joubertina

0.38 (0.0069)

2071

Venterstad

0.38 (0.0112)

1759

Aberdeen

0.37 (0.0088)

1934

Cradock

0.36 (0.0043)

2171

Aliwal North

0.36 (0.0050)

2281

Albany

0.35 (0.0030)

2993

East-London

0.34 (0.0014)

3223

Mdantsane

0.34 (0.0019)

1796

Queenstown

0.31 (0.0030)

2821

Middelburg

0.30 (0.0056)

2406

Graaff-Reinet

0.29 (0.0043)

2660

Humansdorp

0.27 (0.0032)

2906

Uitenhage

0.26 (0.0018)

3031

Port Elizabeth

0.24 (0.0010)

3375

King William's Town

0.18 (0.0037)

3996

The poverty line is 800 Rands per household. Standard errors in parentheses

1 Further information on this grant can be obtained from the South Africa local government website at - http://www.local.gov.za/DCD/dcdindex.html.

2 Hentschel et al. (1999) state that: “In fact, a poverty map would have to be constructed at quite a high degree of spatial disaggregation before the standard errors increase significantly due to small populations. … Only when the [local] population falls well below 500 households does the corresponding standard error rise to levels which could compromise comparisons.”

3 We focus here on the best means of measuring income or consumption poverty and abstract from the debate on what other measures of household welfare add to a multi-dimensional understanding of poverty. See, Ravallion (1992) for further discussion on the measurement of poverty.

4 The sample was stratified by province, urban and non-urban areas, and population group.

5 Recent studies have indicated that the poverty ranking of households is sensitive to assumptions regarding the degree that households have scale economies as well as whether adult equivalency scales are assumed for children (Lanjouw, Milanovic and Paternostro, 1999). However, we do not address this possibility in the current study.

6 Note that the first figure is household poverty, while the latter is individual poverty. I.e., 28.8% of the households in South Africa have a monthly household income of less than 800 Rands, whereas 48.4% of the individuals live in households with monthly per capita income of less than R250.

7 We discuss the last four columns of Table 3 as well as Table 4-6 after the methodology for imputing expenditures is presented.

8 We also explored specifications which included either the number of households in the district or the square root of this number to see if smaller MDs had measurably greater deviation between the census and the IES data. The coefficient of cluster size were generally significant at the 10% level or less and with a sign consistent with the expectation that precision increased with the size of the cluster. However, neither the regression r-square values or the magnitude of the coefficient of other variables were affect by the inclusion of the cluster size. Thus, the regressions reported in the table do not included the number of households.

9 If we look at the correlation of average income from the IES and average expenditures from that survey, we find that at the province the correlations is 0.99. At the MD level the correlation is 0.96. For both levels the rank correlations are above 0.93.

10 The methodology employed here of calculating headcount indices from the imputed expenditures in the census is based on Hentschel et al. (1999).. More details can be found in that paper.

11 Data for each magisterial district as well as for town and place names are available from Statistics South Africa.


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