SA4X6     
Welfare Analysis and Measurement

This information is for the 2015/16 session.

Teacher responsible

Prof Stephen Jenkins OLD2.29 and Dr Berkay Ozcan OLD2.32

Availability

This course is compulsory on the MPA in Public and Social Policy. This course is available on the MPA Dual Degree (LSE and Columbia), MPA Dual Degree (LSE and Hertie), MPA Dual Degree (LSE and NUS), MPA Dual Degree (LSE and Sciences Po), MPA in European Public and Economic Policy, MPA in International Development, MPA in Public Policy and Management, MPA in Public and Economic Policy, MSc in Inequalities and Social Science, MSc in International Health Policy, MSc in International Health Policy (Health Economics) and MSc in Social Policy (Research). This course is available as an outside option to students on other programmes where regulations permit.

Pre-requisites

The course has no formal pre-requisites. Because much of the empirical evidence referred to in the course is quantitative in nature, a familiarity with basic statistical concepts and basic calculus are very useful. These topics are reviewed during the pre-sessional course of the MPA programme (EC408).

Course content

This course provides an introduction to the analysis and measurement of the welfare of individuals and societies, examining concepts, measurement and data, as well as providing illustrations. The aims are to provide an understanding of the main tools used to measure and monitor individuals and social welfare, and to develop skills for assessing academic research and official statistics (as produced by national or international agencies) and for undertaking one’s own analysis. The first half of the course focuses on monetary measures of economic wellbeing notably income, and on the experience of OECD countries (especially the UK, EU, and USA), but the aim is also to place these in the context of developments based on other approaches and in other countries including middle- and low-income nations. The topics covered include measurement of inequality, poverty, and mobility; setting poverty thresholds and equivalence scales; data sources and their quality; empirical illustrations considering assessments of trends within countries, cross-national differences, and global poverty and inequality. The second half of the course broadens the perspective to consider a range of non-monetary, multidimensional, and subjective measures of welfare for individuals and societies. Examples include occupational and socio-economic status (SES), anthropometric measures, the Human Development Index and related indices of development, and measures of happiness and life satisfaction.

Teaching

15 hours of lectures and 13 hours and 30 minutes of seminars in the MT. 15 hours of lectures and 16 hours and 30 minutes of seminars in the LT. 1 hour and 30 minutes of seminars in the ST.

Indicative reading

Most of the reading for the course is in journal articles. Books providing overviews include Atkinson AB (1983) The Economics of Inequality, and Salverda W, Nolan B, Smeeding TM (eds) (2009) The Oxford Handbook on Economic Inequality. A full reading list is distributed at the beginning of the course.

Assessment

Exam (75%, duration: 3 hours) in the main exam period.
Essay (25%, 2000 words) in the LT.

Student performance results

(2011/12 - 2013/14 combined)

Classification % of students
Distinction 7.6
Merit 69.6
Pass 21.5
Fail 1.3

Key facts

Department: Social Policy

Total students 2014/15: 42

Average class size 2014/15: 14

Controlled access 2014/15: Yes

Lecture capture used 2014/15: Yes (MT & LT)

Value: One Unit

Guidelines for interpreting course guide information

Personal development skills

  • Leadership
  • Self-management
  • Team working
  • Problem solving
  • Application of information skills
  • Communication
  • Application of numeracy skills
  • Specialist skills

Course survey results

(2011/12 - 2013/14 combined)

1 = "best" score, 5 = "worst" score

The scores below are average responses.

Response rate: 80.9%

Question

Average
response

Reading list (Q2.1)

2.3

Materials (Q2.3)

1.8

Course satisfied (Q2.4)

2.2

Lectures (Q2.5)

2.4

Integration (Q2.6)

2

Contact (Q2.7)

1.9

Feedback (Q2.8)

2

Recommend (Q2.9)

Yes

61.8%

Maybe

30.9%

No

7.3%