EXTREME POVERTY ERADICATION IN THE LDCs AND THE POST-2015 - - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

extreme poverty eradication in the ldcs and the post 2015
SMART_READER_LITE
LIVE PREVIEW

EXTREME POVERTY ERADICATION IN THE LDCs AND THE POST-2015 - - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

EXTREME POVERTY ERADICATION IN THE LDCs AND THE POST-2015 DEVELOPMENT AGENDA For presentation at the Special Event Launch of the OHRLLS Flagship Report State of the Least Developed Countries 2014 Thursday, 23 October 2014, UN


slide-1
SLIDE 1

EXTREME POVERTY ERADICATION IN THE LDCs AND THE POST-2015 DEVELOPMENT AGENDA

For presentation at the Special Event Launch of the OHRLLS Flagship Report “State of the Least Developed Countries 2014” Thursday, 23 October 2014, UN Headquarters, NY

By Augustin K. FOSU Professor, ISSER University of Ghana, Legon, Ghana afosu@isser.edu.gh

slide-2
SLIDE 2

Outline

  • Introduction
  • LDCs’ progress on extreme poverty
  • Accounting for poverty progress in LDCs:

Improvements in income vs. inequality

  • Factors influencing poverty progress
  • Eradicating poverty - A policy foundation for

sustainable progress

  • Toward a post-2015 development agenda for LDCs
slide-3
SLIDE 3

Introduction

  • Importance: Extreme poverty eradication is enshrined as

goal 1 in the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs).

  • With more than 75% of their citizens living on less than

US$2 a day and nearly 51% on less than US$1.25 a day, the LDCs are the poorest and the most vulnerable countries in the world (UN, 2011).

  • These compare with developing countries (DCs) generally
  • f 39% and 21%, respectively.
  • Note, however: Even among LDCs, there are considerable

differences (based on our present sample of 29 countries), with a range of: 2% (Bhutan) to 81% (Burundi).

slide-4
SLIDE 4

Progress on Extreme Poverty: LDCs (vs. DCs)

  • Since the 1990s, there has been a steady progress in all

three measures of poverty for both LDCs and the DCs

  • generally. During 1993-2010 for LDCs:

– Poverty Headcount (Incidence): fell by 27% (compared with 49% for DCs) – Poverty Gap (Spread): fell by 32% (compared with 54% for DCs) – Poverty Gap Squared (Severity): fell by 33% (compared with 54% for DCs)

  • Thus, progress on poverty has been even faster among

DCs generally

  • Furthermore, the LDC-DC relative poverty rate is actually

larger for the spread (3.0) and severity (3.5) than for the incidence (2.3)

slide-5
SLIDE 5
  • Top 2 quintiles:

– Bhutan, Cambodia, Nepal, Gambia, Timor-Leste, and Togo – Ethiopia, Guinea, Mali, Mauritania, Senegal, and Uganda

  • Bottom quintile:

– Burundi, Madagascar, Sierra Leone, Tanzania, Yemen and Zambia (poverty increase for only Madagascar, Yemen, and Zambia)

Progress on Extreme Poverty (Incidence): Some Country Differences among LDCs

slide-6
SLIDE 6
  • On average, income growth has been the main

mechanism for progress on poverty (consistent with the global evidence).

  • However, inequality was consequential in many

countries

– In most cases it was complementary

– In certain cases it reduced the progress

attributable to income growth – And, in some cases it was mainly responsible for the limited progress on poverty

Accounting for Progress on poverty: Improvement in income and inequality?

slide-7
SLIDE 7

Four main thematic determinants:

  • Institutional frameworks
  • Gender equality
  • Infrastructural development and service delivery
  • External factors

Factors influencing LDCs’ poverty progress

slide-8
SLIDE 8
  • Institutional Quality (IQ) (analysis based on the 29 LDCs)

– Progress on poverty is positively correlated with Institutional Quality (IQ) measures: ‘rule of law’, ‘government effectiveness’, ‘control of corruption’ and ‘political stability’ – For example, Bhutan, the LDC with the highest progress

  • n poverty, is also ranked in the topmost quintile on IQ

– Also, Senegal, ranked in the second top quintile on poverty reduction, is in the topmost quintile on IQ – Similarly, Burundi and Yemen both fall in the lowest quintile on IQ and also in the lowest bottom quintile on poverty progress (and Angola, CAR, and G-Bissau were all ranked in the bottom quintile on IQ and in the penultimate bottom quintile on poverty progress)

Factors influencing poverty progress, cont’d

slide-9
SLIDE 9
  • Gender Equality

– Constraints on women empowerment and gender parity in LDCs are due to a variety of factors, which are indicated in the report and are to be better articulated by others Casual Empiricism: – Bhutan, Cambodia and Nepal, all top performers on poverty progress also display relatively low values of the gender inequality index (GII) (UNDP, 2013) – In contrast, Tanzania, Sierra Leone and Yemen, all bottom performers on poverty, exhibit high values of GII.

(UNDP, 2013)

Factors influencing poverty progress, cont’d

slide-10
SLIDE 10
  • Infrastructure and Service Delivery

– Infrastructure development is a key to achieving economic development and eradicating poverty, through growth, but also by reducing inequality (Estache, Foster

and Wodon 2002; Estache and Wodon, 2011; Ogun, 2010).

– Improvement in public service delivery would enhance household incomes by allowing time currently spent on domestic activities to be used for generating income

(Barwell, 1996).

Factors influencing poverty progress, cont’d

slide-11
SLIDE 11

Bhutan: A development success story

  • Among the countries assessed, Bhutan is the most

successful on all the three measures of poverty reduction, and on per capita GDP growth, income growth and on reduction in inequality.

  • The explanation?

– Enhanced public service delivery (IMF, 2010a) – Resulting from decentralization, and improved political and administrative capacities – Relatively high gender equality – Structural transformation toward higher industrial shares – How? As part of effective five-year plans with the support of various donors and development partners

slide-12
SLIDE 12

Ethiopia: Agriculture takes the lead

  • Ethiopia, ranked in the second top quintile on poverty

reduction, has relied on agricultural development

  • Agriculture, increasing sector share of GDP and currently the

leading sector share

  • How?

– In 1994, the Agriculture Development Led Industrialization strategy adopted by the Ethiopian Government became the basis of more than a decade of reforms, policies and strategies, e.g., increased investment in (Berhanu, 2012):

  • National research centres
  • Rural infrastructure
  • Farming training centres
  • Facilities for vocational education on crop production
  • Water use and management.
slide-13
SLIDE 13
  • Tanzania’s high economic growth began in 2000, following

economic reforms, driven mainly by relatively capital- intensive sectors, generating little in the way of employment.

  • Consequently, there has been limited income growth, with

increased inequality (bottom quintile).

  • With little change in the agricultural sector, the source of

livelihoods for 80% of Tanzanians, household income increased little (penultimate bottom quintile), and poverty fell

  • nly slightly (bottom quintile on all three poverty measures).
  • Upshot: The industrial and service sectors are the main

contributors to GDP. Yet, employment generation in both sectors remains low (World Bank, 2014).

Tanzania: Growth with greater inequality and limited progress on poverty

slide-14
SLIDE 14

External factors keep LDCs on the margins

  • Global economic integration remains incomplete in LDCs, due to:

– The gradual erosion of the marginal trade preferences extended to the LDCs – Structural difficulties (supply constraints)

  • Barriers to international market access

– Existence of tariff and non-tariff trade barriers – Agricultural support and subsidies in OECD countries

  • Financial flows (e.g. ODA, FDI and new sources of innovative

finances) remain modest. – ODA continues to be the largest and most critical source of external financing – FDI flows to the DCs have risen steadily since the turn of the century; yet LDCs are at a relative disadvantage in attracting FDI.

slide-15
SLIDE 15

Concluding: Eradicating poverty - a a policy foundation for sustainable progress

Raising income growth

  • Policies likely to

accelerate and sustain growth would comprise not only those that expand the factors of production, but also those that enhance total factor productivity (TFP).

Reducing income inequality

  • Redistributive

strategies, with careful attention to each national context.

Eradicating poverty in LDCs

slide-16
SLIDE 16

Concluding: Eradicating poverty - a policy foundation for sustainable progress, cont’d

  • Enhance institutional quality (IQ)
  • Reduce market imperfections and improve service

delivery

  • Reduce gender inequality at all levels (by improving

women’s access to economic opportunities through vocational and managerial skills, and access to land, technology and finance).

  • Improve domestic resource mobilization
slide-17
SLIDE 17

Concluding: Eradicating poverty – Toward a post-2015 development agenda

  • Accelerate infrastructure development for creating an

enabling environment for structural transformation and accelerated growth.

  • Strengthen productive capacity in all sectors through

technological capabilities and greater value addition (including gender equality).

  • Improve the capacity of LDCs’ statistical agencies to

collect, process, store and disseminate accurate and reliable data.

  • Improve institutional quality (IQ) for ensuring a supporting

policy framework.

  • Strengthen international development cooperation.
  • These should form the basis for the post-2015

development agenda.

slide-18
SLIDE 18

Thank you!