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Poverty, Inequality, in Latin America

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Poverty Evolution: El Salvador. Percentage of Households ... El Salvador too small and there is not enough land for reducing poverty of rural ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Poverty, Inequality, in Latin America


1
Poverty, Inequality,in Latin America
  • Policy and Microfinance

2
What is poverty?
  • Inadequate satisfaction of needs
  • Mostly related with low levels of income
  • Poverty is multidimensional
  • There are many needs
  • Shelter, knowledge, food, social interaction
  • There is not a unique definition for poverty
  • There is not a unique poverty measurement
  • People love to argue about poverty

3
Development Economicsin the past
  • More growth ? less poverty
  • ? Focus on making GDP grow faster
  • Already an urban bias
  • Fragmented economies, Import Substitution
    Industrialization
  • Also focus on urban poverty
  • But majority of LA poor live in RURAL areas (60)
    and their poverty is deeper

4
Rural vs. Urban Poverty
  • In 5 out of 12 countries rural population is
    more than 40 total population
  • In 10 countries rural povertygturban
  • In all LA countries, the majority of extremely
    poor are rural
  • Nicaragua, Honduras, Guatemala, Ecuador, El
    Salvador, Paraguay, Colombia, Peru, Venezuela,
    Mexico, Brazil and Chile.

5
Poverty Evolution El SalvadorPercentage of
Households
Fuente Encuesta de Hogares de Propósitos
Múltiples, Ministerio de Economía
6
BoliviaPoverty Evolution 1976 - 2001
98.6
100
95.3
90.9
(0.21)
(0.48)
85.5
80
70.9
(0.93)
58.6
of Households
66.3
(1.33)
60
(0.84)
53.1
(1.52)
40
Rural
39.0
Total
Urban
20
1976
1992
2001
7
Now
  • Focus on rural poverty
  • Factors influencing the capacity of the rural
    households as a small entrepreneur and as a
    production unit
  • Accelerated economic growth is still regarded as
    the prime mechanism to diminish poverty

8
LA Background
  • Abundant in land
  • CR smaller than WV, ES half of CR, Bolivia 20x CR
  • But large proportion of landless or near landless
    rural workers
  • High concentration of land
  • Economies of scale
  • El Salvador too small and there is not enough
    land for reducing poverty of rural poor (5 mill.
    Tot. pop.)
  • Small share of rural workers in labor market
    (30-45, depending on country size)
  • Small share of agriculture in economy (15-25)
  • ? Low added value of the sector

9
High degree of heterogeneityin LA rural poor
  • Education
  • Per capita income
  • Access to services
  • Security of land tenure
  • Labor and rural financial markets
  • Weather
  • Culture

10
Estimates of indigenous pop.
11
More selected indicators
12
Poverty measurement
  • Basic needs fulfillment Indexes
  • Income/consumption
  • ?welfare/utility proxies
  • poverty lines?
  • Comparisons
  • Cross-country
  • Within-country?

13
La Paz - Income
14
Cochabamba - Income
15
Chuquisaca - Income
16
Gini Coefficients
1995
1997
1999
of income
of households
17
Two kinds of poverty
  • Transitory phenomenon ? Vulnerability
  • Exogenous shocks
  • Severe droughts (El Niño), macroeconomic crisis
    (Argentina), political upheavals (wars, drug war
    in Colombia, heavy rain in La Paz-Bolivia or San
    Jose-CR, Hugo Chavez in Venezuela, earthquakes in
    El Salvador), etc
  • Structural conditions
  • Little or no productive assets
  • Low assets productivity
  • Demographic, ethic
  • Concentrations of political and social power

18
Household Income - 1995
Colones
Households ranking according 1995 income
Nota Incluye solamente las familias del panel
Fuente FUSADES/BASIS, Encuestas de Pobreza Rural
19
Household Income - 1997
Colones
Households ranking according 1995 income
Nota Incluye solamente las familias del panel
Fuente FUSADES/BASIS, Encuestas de Pobreza Rural
20
Inadequate satisfaction of needs
  • Low household income
  • Low productivity of the country in general
  • Individual household characteristics
  • Education, dependency rates, assets.
  • Lack of supply of many goods and services
  • Health and Medical Services
  • Schools
  • Lack of knowledge about the right think to do
  • (solid vs. liquid food)
  • Electricity
  • Roads ? access to markets of inputs and outputs

21
Poverty alleviation strategy
  • For each country depend on
  • individual stage of development
  • and rate of growth

22
Why are the poor poor?
  • Few assets, no capital accumulation (both human
    and physical)
  • Inegalitarian development
  • El Salvador, Costa Rica
  • Bolivia, Argentina
  • Productivity of their assets is low
  • Government failures
  • Imperfect or incomplete markets

23
Why are the poor poor?(part II)
  • Geographically concentration of economic
    activities and increases in efficiency
  • Reduce nonfarm employment opportunities for the
    rural population
  • Rural population immobile because of low skills,
    age distributions, and ethnic characteristics
    (language barriers)
  • Or, when they migrate? urban poor

24
Three elements for promoting people out of poverty
  • Building the assets for the poor
  • Countering the effects of missing or failing
    markets (markets imperfections) and fragmented
    markets
  • Remedying the failures of government
  • Last two? key factors to increase the
    productivity of assets owned by the rural poor

25
Human Capital
  • Educational levels are low
  • The returns to education in the rural areas are
    low too
  • Return to education in farm activities are
    smaller than in nonfarm activities
  • Perhaps, the main impact of education among rural
    people is to facilitate their migration to urban
    areas, but
  • Educate people to develop in rural areas, not to
    move to urban areas (Stiglitz)

26
Remedying the failures of government
  • Land redistribution
  • May increase farm output buy may have only a
    limited impact on household income
  • Give redistributed land those who will work it,
    not to former militia/guerrilla
  • Access to credit
  • Technical assistance
  • Education
  • Defragmentation of markets

27
Microfinance and Poverty alleviation
28
Background
  • 500 million economically active poor people in
    the world operating microenterprises and small
    businesses
  • Most of them do not have access to adequate
    financial services
  • Credit. Where to they get them from?
  • Savings. Do they save? How?
  • Insurance
  • Payment services
  • Do they need them?
  • First best, second best,
  • Cost Benefit Analysis and alternative policies

29
Microfinance
  • Has evolved as an economic development approach
    intended to benefit low-income women and men.
  • Provision of financial services to low
    income-clients (usually self employed)
  • Traders, street vendors, small farmers, service
    providers (hairdressers), artisans, small
    producers
  • Group formation
  • Self-confidence
  • Women/poor empowerment! (_at__at_)

30
Microfinance
  • Small loans, for working capital
  • Non traditional lending technologies
  • Collateral substitutes
  • Group guarantees (solidarity group)
  • Compulsory savings
  • TV, bed, VCR!
  • Access to repeated and larger loans based on
    repayment performance
  • Training, education, health programs
  • ..

31
Subsidized Credit (80s)
  • ???
  • Problem
  • Most programs accumulated large loan losses and
    required frequent recapitalization
  • ? Market based solutions

32
Subsidized Credit
  • Undermines development (no infinitely rich donor!
  • Poor pay can pay interest rates and cover
    transactions costs
  • Sustainability ? institutional permanence
  • ?efficiency

33
Services demanded by the poor
  • Productive Credits
  • Secure Savings
  • Not only pigs and cows
  • Or money under the mattress
  • Consumption loans
  • Consumption smoothing
  • Transitory poverty alleviation

34
Strengths of Microfinance
  • Potentially capable of reaching the poor
  • Financial sustainability, self-sufficient,
    subsidy free, LOCALLY MANAGED
  • Potential to build on traditional system
  • The availability of better financial products as
    a result of experimentation and innovation

35
Risks
  • Productive credit is not for all the poor
  • Neither consumption credit
  • Minimum scale for sustainability
  • Lack of local qualified managers

36
The Powerless and empowerment
  • Norms of expected behavior
  • Within the household
  • Gender differences
  • Age differences (people in Bolivia)
  • Within the community
  • Between socioeconomic groups
  • Caste, ethnicity, wealth

37
The 90s in LA (17)Székely
  • 70s both reduce
  • 80s both increase
  • 90s?
  • Persistent inequality
  • Lower poverty
  • LA most unequal region in the world
  • Inequality is inhibiting poverty reduction

38
Increases in inequality
  • Argentina (rich got richer middle class poorer)
  • Bolivia (something wrong with data?
  • El Salvador (shocks natural disasters economic
    events)
  • Nicaragua
  • The better-off people are able to improve their
    income faster than others.
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