Michalis Moatsos (M.)
Research profile
My main interest lies with the evolution of material deprivation and inequalities on a global scale, both in the 21st and previous centuries. In my research the role of prices is of essential importance in both the identification and measurement of poverty. I am also investigating the levels and trends of historical real wages around the world. Lately, I delve into the realm of the rich, by investigating the distribution of wealth in the Netherlands since the mid-19th century.
Research projects
Unified Global Poverty: An Absolute and Relative Cost of Basic Needs Framework (UKRI funded / Marie Curie Action evaluated postgraduate fellowship at King's College London)
Poverty eradication is the flagship of United Nations Sustainable Development Goals. However, official global absolute poverty estimates are based on the standard World Bank dollar-a-day approach, which falls short in the prime objective of absolute poverty measurement: tracking a constant standard of living over time and across countries. The World Bank’s Commission on Global Poverty –implicitly recognizing this shortcoming– recommends the Cost of Basic Needs method, which is immune to the drawback of the standard approach.
The objectives of the Unified Global Poverty project are to: (a) produce global poverty statistics via the operationalization on a global scale of an absolute poverty definition that is already internationally ratified and described in the United Nations Copenhagen Declaration (together with methodological components such as reference diets, population tailored nutritional targets, erroraccounting microsimulations and linear programming, and by assembling global price series, 2000-2020); (b) unify the absolute and relative aspects of poverty within that framework, thereby avoiding the methodological discontinuity between more and less economically developed countries; (c) maximize policy relevance of global poverty statistics.
Estimates of global poverty influence the priorities of (inter)national aid agencies and this research has substantial potential to better guide their funding decisions, consequently helping to improve the lives of millions. Developing this measurement framework well in advance of the Sustainable Development Goals deadline in 2030, and in combination with an intersectoral secondment alongside the United Nations Special Rapporteur on Extreme Poverty and Human Rights, will be crucial to maximize its impact.
Key publications
Recent publications
Other publications
https://cris.maastrichtuniversity.nl/en/persons/michalis-moatsos