Примери коришћења Material deprivation на Енглеском и њихови преводи на Српски
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Severe material deprivation is especially frequent with older women.
Sanja Vujackov: Profiles of poverty and material deprivation in the Republic of Serbia in 2013.
Material deprivation rate represents the share of the materially deprived population in the total population.
In the 1980s the Black Report, published in the United Kingdom, went against this view andargued that the true root of the problem was material deprivation.
In the case of material deprivation in old age will become full of discontent and bitterness.
Power and spaceSocio-spatial inequalities and exclusion: filtration, gentrification, homelessness,marginal neighborhoods, material deprivation in the neighborhood, the concept getaPublic services as development institutions.
Material deprivation entails lacking in what is considered necessary for a decent life in a given society.
This means persons were affected by at least one of the following three conditions: risk of poverty after social transfers( income poverty),severe material deprivation or living in households with very low working intensity.
Stressful situations and conflicts(material deprivation, loss of loved ones, injustice, betrayal, or care of the second half of the family);
Trends have deteriorated in the short term, in particular after 2009, with an increasing number of people being affected by one or more forms of poverty,namely monetary poverty, severe material deprivation, very low work intensity or/and long-term unemployment.
In 2012, the material deprivation rate in the Republic of Serbia stood at 44.3%, and the severe material deprivation rate- 26.8%.
At-risk-of-poverty indicators and the AROPE rate are calculated on the basis of the Survey on Income andLiving Conditions(SILC). Material deprivation entails lacking in what is considered necessary for a decent life in a given society.
Depth of material deprivation represents the mean number of items that the materially deprived portion of the population cannot afford.
Comparison of poverty measures:population breakdown by poverty statusDegree of overlap high relative to the proportion experiencing at least one form of poverty in GermanyRelatively low levels of overlap between measures in UKGreater overlap of material deprivation with income poverty than expenditure povertyGermany.
The rate of severe material deprivation for households with only one adult is 9.6 percent if the household has no dependent children.
It shows the proportion of the population which is at risk of poverty after social transfers, and/or severely materially deprived(people who, owing to a lack of financial means,cannot afford at least four of the nine household material deprivation items), and/or living in households with zero or very low work intensity(adults worked for fewer than 20% of the total number of months in which they could have worked during the reference period).
In the European Union, the material deprivation rate stood at 15.7%, the severe material deprivation rate was 7.5%, and the extreme material deprivation rate was 3%.
While financial poverty(income poverty)concerns the lack of funds required for individuals to satisfy their needs(considered to be essential in the society in which they live), material deprivation pertains to the actual status attained by individuals(the ability to obtain the goods and services considered necessary for a high-quality life). Within the concept of deprivation, vulnerability is analysed using outcome-based non-monetary indicators.
Material DeprivationMaterial deprivation and financial poverty are concepts designed to indicate various aspects of individuals' and households' living conditions.
The goal of the Programme was a deeper understanding of factors affecting poverty,social exclusion, material deprivation, risk of poverty, inequality, access to the labour market and other aspects important for the quality of life of individuals and families in the Republic of Serbia.
The material deprivation rate in the EU was 15.7%, the rate of severe material deprivation 7.5%, and extreme 3%. The Republic of Serbia is at the very top of the EU 28 countries with the highest values of these indicators.
The at-risk-of-poverty rate for pensioners is(15.2%). More detailed information related to poverty, material deprivation, inequality, and work intensity is available in the Statistical Release of the Statistical Office of the Republic of Serbia"Poverty and Social Inequality in the Republic of Serbia".
Material deprivation indicates persistent poverty and is not a result of current financial hardship; it is, therefore, regarded as a complementary approach to identifying poverty, enabling an insight beyond what is inferred on the basis of income alone(Boarini& Mira d'Ercole, 2006).
Values below these are registered only by Bulgaria, Romania and Greece.The intensity of material deprivation, i.e. the average number of items that cannot be afforded by a materially deprived individual in the Republic of Serbia in 2016 is 4, and is slightly above the average value for the EU(3.8).
Thus, in the EU, material deprivation is defined in terms of lacking in what is regarded as necessary for a decent life in the European society, rather than within specific societies.
With regard to indicators of material deprivation, which may be viewed as a consequence of poverty, the Republic of Serbia also records higher values than any of the 28 European Union Member States.
In the European Union, the material deprivation rate stood at 19.7%, and in the new Member States- 34.9%, while the severe material deprivation rates stood at 9.9% and 19.7%.
Monitoring of two indicators of material deprivation and two contextual information in the domain of housing(housing costs, overcrowding of households and low quality of housing) has been suggested.
According to the EU methodology, material deprivation is assessed on the basis of whether an individual is able to pay their rent, mortgage or utility bills regularly, to face unexpected expenses, and to afford certain durable consumer goods, a high-quality diet, a holiday and adequate heating.
Poverty, Inequality and Material Deprivation Given the complexity of the phenomenon of poverty, which necessitates its consideration as a multidimensional concept20, measuring poverty is a challenging process involving different approaches, without the possibility of reaching consensual and final decisions on the best approach.