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Is newer better? Evaluating the suitability of nighttime luminosity in proxying poverty in Africa

Is newer better? Evaluating the suitability of nighttime luminosity in proxying poverty in Africa The purpose of the study is to evaluate whether nighttime luminosity sourced from the Defense Meteorological Satellite Program-Operational Linescan System satellite sensors is a suitable proxy for measuring poverty in Africa.Design/methodology/approachOur study performs wavelet coherence analysis to investigate the time-frequency synchronization between the nightlight data and “income-to-wealth” ratio for 39 African countries between 1992 and 2012.FindingsAll-in-all, the authors find that approximately a third of African countries produce positive synchronizations between nighttime data and “income-to-wealth” ratio and hence conclude that most African countries are not at liberty to use nighttime data to proxy conventional poverty statistics.Originality/valueIn differing from previous studies, the authors examine the suitability of nightlight intensity as a proxy of poverty for individual African countries using much more rigorous analysis. http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png African Journal of Economic and Management Studies Emerald Publishing

Is newer better? Evaluating the suitability of nighttime luminosity in proxying poverty in Africa

Is newer better? Evaluating the suitability of nighttime luminosity in proxying poverty in Africa

African Journal of Economic and Management Studies , Volume 14 (1): 18 – Feb 24, 2023

Abstract

The purpose of the study is to evaluate whether nighttime luminosity sourced from the Defense Meteorological Satellite Program-Operational Linescan System satellite sensors is a suitable proxy for measuring poverty in Africa.Design/methodology/approachOur study performs wavelet coherence analysis to investigate the time-frequency synchronization between the nightlight data and “income-to-wealth” ratio for 39 African countries between 1992 and 2012.FindingsAll-in-all, the authors find that approximately a third of African countries produce positive synchronizations between nighttime data and “income-to-wealth” ratio and hence conclude that most African countries are not at liberty to use nighttime data to proxy conventional poverty statistics.Originality/valueIn differing from previous studies, the authors examine the suitability of nightlight intensity as a proxy of poverty for individual African countries using much more rigorous analysis.

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References (30)

Publisher
Emerald Publishing
Copyright
© Nicolene Hamman and Andrew Phiri
ISSN
2040-0705
DOI
10.1108/ajems-02-2022-0042
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

The purpose of the study is to evaluate whether nighttime luminosity sourced from the Defense Meteorological Satellite Program-Operational Linescan System satellite sensors is a suitable proxy for measuring poverty in Africa.Design/methodology/approachOur study performs wavelet coherence analysis to investigate the time-frequency synchronization between the nightlight data and “income-to-wealth” ratio for 39 African countries between 1992 and 2012.FindingsAll-in-all, the authors find that approximately a third of African countries produce positive synchronizations between nighttime data and “income-to-wealth” ratio and hence conclude that most African countries are not at liberty to use nighttime data to proxy conventional poverty statistics.Originality/valueIn differing from previous studies, the authors examine the suitability of nightlight intensity as a proxy of poverty for individual African countries using much more rigorous analysis.

Journal

African Journal of Economic and Management StudiesEmerald Publishing

Published: Feb 24, 2023

Keywords: Africa; Complex wavelets; DMSP-OLS nighttime; Morlet wavelets; Poverty and inequality

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