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Using PPI scores for comparative analysis
Hi there,
I'm using the PPI score to compare households participating in a project in terms of their level of interaction with the project service - a mobile phone based extension service for smallholder farmers. So one of the metrics I am comparing along different lines in the sample (users' gender, occupation, crop types, and poverty level with respect to an international poverty line of US$1.25/day) is average calls made to the service over a specified period.
Is it correct to calculate a group of households' PPI scores and then, using secondary data sources to estimate the average poverty level of the entire rural population for the country in question (e.g. 67%, using the US$1.25 line again), categorise your sample into those who are "above" and "below" the poverty line, based on their estimated % likelihoods of falling below the poverty line? I guess you could phrase the distinction between these categories more correctly as "households who are less/more likely than the average household to fall below the poverty line." Is that a correct approach? I have seen this method of using the PPI scores to categorise households into "below and above the poverty line" was used to compare levels of mobile phone ownership/access between the two groups, and I'm interested to know if this is appropriate use of the PPI.
In my case, a project in Tanzania, using the PPI with a random sample suggests that the poverty level for participating households is 36.6%, but the poverty level for the entire country is considerably higher 67.9% (using World Bank data for the same poverty level); however, splitting households into two groups as per the above method ("more/less likely than the average to be poor...") implies only 14% of participating households fall in the "poorer" category.
Any guidance on this would be most appreciated!
Many thanks,
Jonathan
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