ppiPER2024 {ppitables} | R Documentation |
Poverty Probability Index (PPI) lookup table for Peru based on data from the 2022 Encuesta Nacional de Hogares (ENAHO)
Description
Poverty Probability Index (PPI) lookup table for Peru based on data from the 2022 Encuesta Nacional de Hogares (ENAHO)
Usage
ppiPER2024
Format
A data frame with 15 columns and 101 rows:
score
PPI score
nlFood
Food poverty line
nl100
National poverty line (100%)
nl150
National poverty line (150%)
nl200
National poverty line (200%)
ppp215
Below $2.15 per day purchasing power parity (2017)
ppp365
Below $3.65 per day purchasing power parity (2017)
ppp685
Below $6.85 per day purchasing power parity (2017)
ppp190
Below $1.90 per day purchasing power parity (2011)
ppp320
Below $3.20 per day purchasing power parity (2011)
ppp550
Below $5.50 per day purchasing power parity (2011)
percentile20
Below 20th percentile poverty line
percentile40
Below 40th percentile poverty line
percentile60
Below 60th percentile poverty line
percentile80
Below 80th percentile poverty line
Source
Examples
# Access Peru PPI table
ppiPER2024
# Given a specific PPI score (from 0 - 100), get the row of poverty
# probabilities from PPI table it corresponds to
ppiScore <- 50
ppiPER2024[ppiPER2024$score == ppiScore, ]
# Use subset() function to get the row of poverty probabilities corresponding
# to specific PPI score
ppiScore <- 50
subset(ppiPER2024, score == ppiScore)
# Given a specific PPI score (from 0 - 100), get a poverty probability
# based on a specific poverty definition. In this example, the USAID
# extreme poverty definition
ppiScore <- 50
ppiPER2024[ppiPER2024$score == ppiScore, "nl100"]
[Package ppitables version 0.6.0 Index]