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Multidimensional poverty measurement : The value of life and the challenge to value aggregation

Hassoun, Nicole ; Herlitz, Anders LU and Esposito, Lucio (2020) In Philosophy and Poverty 2. p.321-337
Abstract
Multidimensional poverty measures require implicit, if not explicit, trade-offs between different dimensions. One of the central values that has to be weighed against other values in this context is the value of life, since this is a central part of multidimensional poverty measures—often proxied for by longevity or child mortality. Different ways of weighting value dimensions (even weighting dimensions equally) require justification. This paper explores the idea that it is impossible to weigh the value of life (or poverty dimensions that reflect this value) against other values. We reject the idea that life has infinite value but provide a preliminary defence for two arguments that life’s value is incommensurable with but trumps the value... (More)
Multidimensional poverty measures require implicit, if not explicit, trade-offs between different dimensions. One of the central values that has to be weighed against other values in this context is the value of life, since this is a central part of multidimensional poverty measures—often proxied for by longevity or child mortality. Different ways of weighting value dimensions (even weighting dimensions equally) require justification. This paper explores the idea that it is impossible to weigh the value of life (or poverty dimensions that reflect this value) against other values. We reject the idea that life has infinite value but provide a preliminary defence for two arguments that life’s value is incommensurable with but trumps the value of other things. On the first, life’s value is incommensurable with but trumps the value of other things because it is a necessary precondition for other things to be valuable to someone. On the second, the trumping relation is itself part of the value of life. If either of these arguments work, then there is reason to revise many multi-dimensional poverty measures that trade-off improvements in longevity against other things. Further investigation is necessary to determine whether similar arguments can show that other dimensions of poverty are likewise incommensurable. (Less)
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author
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publishing date
type
Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding
publication status
published
subject
host publication
The Dimensions of Poverty : Measurement, Epistemic Injustice, Activism - Measurement, Epistemic Injustice, Activism
series title
Philosophy and Poverty
editor
Beck, Valentin ; Hahn, Henning and Lepenies, Robert
volume
2
pages
321 - 337
publisher
Springer
ISSN
2662-4397
2662-4389
ISBN
978-3-030-31711-9
978-3-030-31710-2
DOI
10.1007/978-3-030-31711-9_18
language
English
LU publication?
no
id
f87f4aef-63a8-4dc0-a70a-3929f39c3064
date added to LUP
2024-12-10 14:34:07
date last changed
2025-04-04 14:51:49
@inbook{f87f4aef-63a8-4dc0-a70a-3929f39c3064,
  abstract     = {{Multidimensional poverty measures require implicit, if not explicit, trade-offs between different dimensions. One of the central values that has to be weighed against other values in this context is the value of life, since this is a central part of multidimensional poverty measures—often proxied for by longevity or child mortality. Different ways of weighting value dimensions (even weighting dimensions equally) require justification. This paper explores the idea that it is impossible to weigh the value of life (or poverty dimensions that reflect this value) against other values. We reject the idea that life has infinite value but provide a preliminary defence for two arguments that life’s value is incommensurable with but trumps the value of other things. On the first, life’s value is incommensurable with but trumps the value of other things because it is a necessary precondition for other things to be valuable to someone. On the second, the trumping relation is itself part of the value of life. If either of these arguments work, then there is reason to revise many multi-dimensional poverty measures that trade-off improvements in longevity against other things. Further investigation is necessary to determine whether similar arguments can show that other dimensions of poverty are likewise incommensurable.}},
  author       = {{Hassoun, Nicole and Herlitz, Anders and Esposito, Lucio}},
  booktitle    = {{The Dimensions of Poverty : Measurement, Epistemic Injustice, Activism}},
  editor       = {{Beck, Valentin and Hahn, Henning and Lepenies, Robert}},
  isbn         = {{978-3-030-31711-9}},
  issn         = {{2662-4397}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  pages        = {{321--337}},
  publisher    = {{Springer}},
  series       = {{Philosophy and Poverty}},
  title        = {{Multidimensional poverty measurement : The value of life and the challenge to value aggregation}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-31711-9_18}},
  doi          = {{10.1007/978-3-030-31711-9_18}},
  volume       = {{2}},
  year         = {{2020}},
}