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Beyond headcount statistics: Exploring the utility of energy poverty gap indices in policy design

The publication demonstrates that the choice for a particular energy poverty (gap) indicator makes the implicit welfare choices of energy poverty policies explicit.

Details

Publication date
5 June 2023
Author
Directorate-General for Energy
Country
Netherlands

Description

Recent energy price spikes have led to increased energy poverty among low-income households living in inefficient homes. Accurate statistics on energy poverty help inform resource allocation and better target relief schemes and retrofit funds. Existing indicators are predominantly defined in terms of a headcount ratio – the share of population living below a certain threshold or poverty line. In this paper we draw from the literature on income poverty evaluation to argue that the use of more elaborate energy poverty gap indices can substantiate the design and monitoring of energy poverty policies, by not only considering incidence but also intensity and inequality of energy poverty across households. The publication demonstrates that the choice for a particular energy poverty (gap) indicator makes the implicit welfare choices of energy poverty policies explicit. It illustrates arguments for the case of the Netherlands, using recently developed microdata statistics on energy poverty, and an imposed energy price shock. It shows that spatial targeting of relief funds based on incidence would neglect the full depth of energy poverty deprivation. Finally, the report argues that visualisation techniques from the income poverty literature help to comprehend different poverty orderings and draw comparisons between time periods, regions, and subgroups.

Authors: T.M. Croon, J.S.C.M. Hoekstra,  M.G. Elsinga, F. Dalla Longa, P. Mulder.

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5 OCTOBER 2023
Beyond headcount statistics: Exploring the utility of energy poverty gap indices in policy design