Combating Persistent Poverty in Africa
Combating Persistent Poverty in Africa
Combating Persistent Poverty in Africa
IN AFRICA
BASIS Policy Conference
November 15-16 2004
Washington, D.C.
David Hulme
Director, Chronic Poverty Research Centre (CPRC)
Professor, Institute for Development Policy and Management,
School of Environment and Development,
University of Manchester
www.chronicpoverty.org
Outline
What is chronic poverty?
Global extent and prevalence
Why focus on the chronically poor?
Who are they?
Where are they?
Why are people chronically poor?
What does this mean for policy?
Poverty dynamics
Poverty
line
Mean
score
Time
Time
Time
Time
Time
CHRONICALLY POOR
TRANSITORY POOR
NON POOR
135-190 m
Sub-Saharan Africa
90-120 m
China
40-65 m
10-20 m
16-23 m
Europe/Central Asia
2-5 m
3-5 m
Desperately deprived
Relatively non-deprived
Moderately deprived
Insufficient data
OECD
Grievance-based politics?
By denying the poorest those with least to lose we risk
undermining political and economic stability
Useful for mobilising political commitment and funds, but
remains unproven
LOW
POTENTIAL
LESS
FAVOURED
~1.8
billon
people
Cultures of poverty?
Does how people cope with poverty (economically, socially,
psychologically) make poverty more difficult to escape?
International agenda
Using MDGs to address chronic poverty
Financing chronic poverty reduction: increase aid
volume; direct aid to poorest countries, social assistance
and basic services; commit to sustained aid
50
India
accounts for 40% of the
worlds malnourished
children but receives just
3.6% of bilateral aid
0
0
China
has a huge population
but a much smaller
share of children are
malnourished than in
India
50
100
Child malnutrition
Under 5 Mortality