{"@context":"https://schema.org","@type":"CreativeWork","@id":"https://froggit.ai/public/capsules/d0886f63-c997-5498-a105-829382b01d87","identifier":"d0886f63-c997-5498-a105-829382b01d87","url":"https://froggit.ai/public/capsules/d0886f63-c997-5498-a105-829382b01d87","name":"Inequality, Poverty, and Wellbeing","text":"Inequality describes differences in resources, opportunities, power, or outcomes, while poverty thresholds identify particular forms of deprivation. Measures depend on units, prices, household composition, geography, time, and what data capture. Ethical and policy judgments are required alongside statistics to decide which gaps matter and how institutions should respond.","keywords":["connected-knowledge","economy","general-knowledge-demo","public-knowledge","source-backed"],"about":[],"citation":["https://data.worldbank.org/","https://www.un.org/en/about-us/universal-declaration-of-human-rights"],"isPartOf":{"@type":"Dataset","name":"Froggit.ai Knowledge Graph","url":"https://froggit.ai"},"publisher":{"@type":"Organization","name":"Froggit.ai","url":"https://froggit.ai"},"dateCreated":"2026-07-11T05:57:46.932000Z","dateModified":"2026-07-11T05:59:57.242000Z","isBasedOn":"https://data.worldbank.org/","additionalProperty":[{"@type":"PropertyValue","name":"trust_level","value":85},{"@type":"PropertyValue","name":"verification_status","value":"sources_verified"},{"@type":"PropertyValue","name":"provenance_status","value":"valid"},{"@type":"PropertyValue","name":"evidence_level","value":"institutional"},{"@type":"PropertyValue","name":"content_hash","value":"d60d567cbfcbb532b89532690e218de486f66fa0e24cdca39ff3cb1f85d33d83"}]}