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Household Livelihood Survey×Living Standards Measurement Study×
ÁreaDevelopment StudiesDevelopment Studies
FamíliaProcess / pipelineProcess / pipeline
Ano de origem20001980
Autor originalFrank Ellis; CIFOR Poverty Environment NetworkWorld Bank (Living Standards Measurement Study programme)
TipoMulti-source income and assets household surveyMulti-topic integrated household survey
Fonte seminalEllis, F. (2000). Rural Livelihoods and Diversity in Developing Countries. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN: 9780198296966Grosh, M., & Glewwe, P. (Eds.). (2000). Designing Household Survey Questionnaires for Developing Countries: Lessons from 15 Years of the Living Standards Measurement Study. Washington, DC: World Bank. ISBN: 9780821345283
Outros nomesLivelihood survey, Household income survey, Rural livelihoods survey, Income and assets surveyLSMS, LSMS Survey, Living Standards Survey, Integrated Household Survey
Relacionados44
ResumoA household livelihood survey is an instrument designed to capture the full portfolio of activities, income sources, assets, and expenditures through which a household secures its living. Rooted in the rural-livelihoods literature associated with Frank Ellis and in global comparative income studies such as the CIFOR Poverty Environment Network, it measures welfare and resilience by mapping the diversity of a household's economic activities — farming, wage labour, self-employment, environmental harvesting, transfers, and remittances — rather than reducing the household to a single income or consumption figure.The Living Standards Measurement Study (LSMS) is a multi-topic integrated household survey programme launched by the World Bank in 1980 to improve the quality of household data for measuring and analysing welfare in developing countries. Built around a modular questionnaire that links a detailed household interview to community and price questionnaires, the LSMS measures living standards through consumption expenditure rather than income, and connects welfare outcomes to their determinants — employment, education, health, agriculture, and access to services — within a single, internally consistent dataset.
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ScholarGateComparar métodos: Household Livelihood Survey · Living Standards Measurement Study. Recuperado em 2026-06-25 de https://scholargate.app/pt/compare