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Poverty

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emphasised need for equity and interventionist public policy ... employment programs. Capacity. issues of coverage of poor and leakage to non-poor ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Poverty


1
Poverty
  • Poverty concepts and approaches
  • Measures of poverty
  • Anti-poverty policies

2
What is Poverty?
  • Material
  • Dont ask me what poverty is because you have
    met it outside my house. Look at the house and
    count the number of holes. Look at my utensils
    and the clothes that I am wearing. Look at
    everything and write what you see (a poor man,
    Kenya, 1997).

3
What is Poverty?
  • Psychological
  • Poverty is humiliation, the sense of being
    dependent on them, and of being forced to accept
    rudeness, insults and indifference when we seek
    help (Latvia, 1998).

4
What is Poverty?
  • Low levels of human capital (health and
    education)
  • If you dont have money, your disease will take
    you to the grave (an old woman, Ghana, 1995)
  • I am illiterate. I am like a blind person
    (mother, Pakistan, 1995).
  • Being poor is always being tired (Kenya, 1996)
  • I feel ashamed standing before my children when
    I have nothing to help feed the family. Im not
    well when Im unemployed. Its terrible
    (Guinea-Bassau, 1994).

5
Concepts of poverty (1)
  • Money-metric welfare approach
  • poverty is inadequate income to cover basic
    requirements for survival
  • at the level of the individual or household,
    measure a persons income, specify a poverty
    line, and so measure the number of people below
    the poverty line
  • at the level of a country, measure GNP per capita
  • income difficult to measure
  • poverty line can be ambiguous
  • one-dimensional view

6
Concepts of poverty (2)
  • basic needs approach/social exclusion
  • broader, multi-dimensional view, including poor
    health, low levels of education, poor housing etc
  • standard may be absolute literate, vaccinated,
    clean water
  • or relative, determined by social norms
  • often individual indicators are combined into an
    index, e.g. Human Development Index or Human
    Poverty Index (UNDP)
  • comparisons difficult when standards vary
  • focuses on what is measurable
  • data intensive

7
Concepts (3)
  • Capabilities and entitlements
  • entitlements are the bundle of goods and services
    an individual can command, through production or
    exchange
  • depend on ability to sell labour and trade output
    and on degree of economic and political power
  • capabilities are the set of freedoms a person has
    to do the things s/he values (live a healthy
    life, to make decisions, to form friendships and
    family)
  • raises issues of universality of human rights
  • very difficult to form a capabilities list

8
1-a-day Poverty Incidence (WB 2000)
Millions and
9
Human Development Index
  • weighted index of
  • GDP per capita
  • adult Literacy
  • combined school enrolment
  • life expectancy at birth
  • values between 0 and 1 in theory, in practise
    between 0.30 and 0.99

10
same HDI different income
HDR 2006
11
(No Transcript)
12
What are anti-poverty policies?
  • Traditional approaches
  • Trickle-down
  • Growth and redistribution
  • Basic needs
  • Participatory poverty strategies
  • Washington Consensus
  • Targeted interventions

13
Traditional approaches
  • accept as ones lot in life
  • caste, religion
  • relieve
  • charity to deserving poor (orphans, widows)
  • insurance
  • kinship networks, migration, diversifying
    income/spreading risk
  • crime/illegal activities
  • still happens

14
Trickle-down
  • Economic growth
  • gains from growth trickle-down to all rising
    tide that lifts all boats
  • rising employment and wages in urban sector
  • increased demand for rural products and services
  • scope for investment in public goods and services
    for poverty reduction
  • slow in developing countries

15
Alternative Anti-poverty strategies
  • Redistribution with Growth (Chenery et al 1974)
  • without distribution gains from growth not reach
    poor
  • policies land reform, tax, public education,
    public health
  • emphasised need for equity and interventionist
    public policy
  • Basic Needs (ILO, UN, Streeten et al, 1981,
    Cornia et al, 1987)
  • food, water, housing, health, education
  • investment in human capital and productive
    employment
  • Participatory Poverty Strategies (Chambers, 1995)
  • decentralisation, democracy and diversity
  • local solutions to local problems role of NGOs,
    grassroots orgs
  • policies reinforce coping strategies of the poor

16
Washington Consensus (World Bank, IMF)
  • Economic growth main engine of development and
    poverty reduction
  • free markets international trade, flexible
    labour markets, private sector development
  • minimising state intervention, reduction in state
    provision of services

17
Targeted interventions
  • Providing scarce goods/services to the poor
  • micro-credit
  • land reform
  • nutrition programmes
  • employment programs
  • Capacity
  • issues of coverage of poor and leakage to
    non-poor
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