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Poverty in Bangladesh: Creating Opportunities

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Title: Poverty in Bangladesh: Creating Opportunities


1
Poverty in Bangladesh Creating Opportunities
Bridging the East-West divide
  • Ambar Narayan, Hassan Zaman
  • (based on World Bank Poverty Assessment for
    Bangladesh 2008)
  • April 20, 2009

2
Poverty trends in recent years
Poverty headcount rates () Poverty headcount rates () Poverty headcount rates () Poverty headcount rates () Poverty headcount rates ()
Upper PL Upper PL Lower PL Lower PL
2000 2005 2000 2005
National 48.9 40.0 34.3 25.1
Urban 35.2 28.4 19.9 14.6
Rural 52.3 43.8 37.9 28.6
Notes Using official Poverty Lines estimated for HIES (2005, 2000) Notes Using official Poverty Lines estimated for HIES (2005, 2000) Notes Using official Poverty Lines estimated for HIES (2005, 2000) Notes Using official Poverty Lines estimated for HIES (2005, 2000) Notes Using official Poverty Lines estimated for HIES (2005, 2000)
Consumption poverty inability to purchase what
is necessary to satisfy basic needs, including
minimum calorie needs and non-food items
  • Poverty rate reduced from 49 to 40 during
    2000-2005
  • Similar reduction for extreme poverty rate (34
    to 25)
  • Significant reduction in both urban and rural
    poverty
  • No. of people in poverty fell by 6 million, in
    extreme poverty by 8 million
  • But nearly 56 mn. still in poverty, including 35
    mn. in extreme poverty

3
Long-term poverty trends (91-92 to 2005)
  • Poverty rate fell from 57 to 40, extreme poverty
    rate from 41 to 25
  • Highest reduction in poverty during 2000-2005
  • Consumption growth has benefited the poor
  • Stable relative inequality (Gini index for
    consumption at 0.31) since 1995-96
  • During 2000-2005, consumption growth among the
    bottom 30 higher than the average

4
Rich-poor gaps
  • Ratios of percentiles of per capita exp have
    remained mostly unchanged between 2000 and 2005
    (e.g. p90p10, p50p10) little change in
    relative inequality
  • But gaps between percentiles have increased (e.g.
    p90-p10, p50-p10) increase in absolute
    inequality

5
Bangladesh compares well with South Asian
countries in poverty reduction..
  • Poverty reduction in Bangladesh among the
    highest in the region since 1990s
  • Growth in Bangladesh more pro-poor than in
    other SA countries except Nepal

6
. But less so with East Asia
  • East Asian countries have reduced poverty much
    faster higher growth rates and comparable
    responsiveness of poverty to growth
  • If Bangladesh attains similar growth rates, it
    would match the pace of poverty reduction in East
    Asia
  • In 1990 both Bangladesh and Vietnam had poverty
    rate of 58 in 2005 Vietnams poverty rate was
    20, half that of Bangladeshs

7
Poverty projections and MDGs
  • IF the 2000-05 GDP growth is maintained (annual
    average 5.3), MDG target (halving poverty rate
    from 57 in 91-92) will be met
  • These projections assume (based on recent
    history)
  • Stable inequality if inequality were to rise,
    less poverty reduction will occur for same GDP
    growth
  • Continued fall in fertility if household size
    had not fallen (from 5.2 to 4.9) between 2000 and
    2005, poverty reduction would have been cut by
    half
  • Whether the projections are met also depends on
  • Frequency of shocks (e.g. food prices, natural
    disasters) can reduce GDP growth and
    responsiveness of poverty to growth
  • Had there been no rice price shock, there would
    be around 4.2 million fewer poor people in
    Bangladesh in 2008
  • Estimated poverty reduction during 2005-2008
    would have been 5 pct points instead 2
    percentage points with the rice price shock (i.e.
    from 40 to 38)
  • Rice price shock is also estimated to have raised
    poverty gap (average deficit of the poors
    consumption relative to the poverty line) by 30
  • How deep and long the current global recession
    will be (impact on remittances and RMG exports)

8
Rise in non-income indicators of welfare
  • Many non-income indicators improved more
    significantly for the extreme poor than for the
    overall population
  • Consistent with inequality in consumption not
    worsening

9
What explains poverty reduction during 2000-2005?
  • Significant social and economic transformation
  • Economic transformation closely related to
    strong GDP growth (gt5 annually) and urbanization
  • rising returns to human and physical assets,
    especially wages
  • shift from low return agricultural labor to
    nonfarm employment (mainly services) in urban
    areas
  • growth in remittances and exports
  • Forces emerging from social transformations over
    time
  • A fall in the number of dependents in a
    household, linked to past reductions in fertility
  • Increases in labor force participation and
    educational attainment, particularly among women

10
Economic transformation labor markets
  • Poverty reduction attributed to rising labor
    productivity and wages, and (to a lesser extent)
    to shift from agriculture to non-farm employment
  • Increase in labor productivity in industry
    contributed most significantly to income growth
  • Share of agriculture in employment fell from 51
    to 46, that of services grew from 27 to 31
  • Overall job creation during 2000-2005 kept pace
    with population growth
  • Poverty reduction by sector
  • Highest within services due to employment growth
    (5.4 annually, compared to 0.7 in agriculture
    and 3.9 in industry)
  • Substantial in agriculture due to small
    productivity growth and the large share of
    population employed in agriculture
  • Within industry driven primarily by productivity
    growth

11
Demographic transition creates opportunities and
challenges in the labor market
  • Although population growth is now 1.5 per year,
    the working age population is growing at 2.5-2.8
  • Large cohorts will enter the labor market 22
    mn. new entrants will need to be absorbed into
    the labor market between 2005 and 2015
  • Annual rate of job creation has to double in the
    years up to 2015, compared to the rate during
    2000-2005

12
Rising contribution of women in the labor market
  • Womens labor force participation rates, working
    hours, education, income have increased more than
    those of men between 2000 and 2005
  • Women finding jobs increasingly in
  • Urban areas, public sector
  • Self-employment outside agriculture and using
    formal financing (micro-credit)
  • Womens labor income is important for poverty
    reduction but its full potential remains
    unexploited
  • womens labor market participation still too
    small to make a significant dent in poverty
  • growth in womens participation and incomes
    largely concentrated among the nonpoor

13
Remittances and poverty
  • International remittances grew at 20 annually
    during 2000-05 Bangladesh among the top 10
    remittance receiving countries
  • Poverty rate among households receiving
    remittances from abroad is 17 compared to 42
    among the rest
  • Areas with higher incidence of remittances less
    likely to be poor 24 of households in
    Chittagong division and 16 in Sylhet received
    remittances, compared to lt5 in the rest
  • CGE simulations attribute a little above 15 of
    the poverty reduction to the effect of growth of
    foreign remittances
  • However, likely global recession poses clear
    risks to remittance inflow
  • 63 of remittances come from the Gulf where
    construction industry is likely to take a downturn

14
Emerging regional divide in poverty
  • Rising inequality between the East and West
  • Dhaka and Chittagong contributed 79 of national
    poverty reduction with just over half the
    population Khulna and Barisal with 20 of total
    population had no contribution
  • Till 2000, the largest difference was between
    Dhaka and the rest of the country from 2000 to
    2005, divergence between East and West
  • East-West gap in poverty rate doubled from 2000
    to 2005

15
Growth poles and the East-West economic divide
  • Regions differentiated by access to growth poles
  • Dhaka and Chittagong growth poles (shares in
    population, economic activities)
  • Padma and Jamuna rivers obstacles to access to
    the growth poles
  • East-West gap widened from 2000 to 2005
  • Average consumption in East 9 higher in 2000,
    17 higher in 2005
  • Much faster consumption growth for Eastern poor
    than Western poor
  • Gaps in both endowments and returns contributed
    to the widening East-West consumption gap
  • Gap in endowment widened for all gap in returns
    widened for the poor

16
Labor markets East and West
  • Real wages growing robustly in the East but
    stagnating in the West
  • Total labor income growth in the East was twice
    that of the West
  • Slow growth of wages in the West mostly explained
    by stagnation in the urban areas
  • Labor markets and the types of jobs they offer
    are also different between regions
  • In the East, salaried jobs dominate in the West,
    farming remains important, with high share of
    low-paid daily waged workers
  • 43 of labor income in the West from agriculture,
    compared to 25 in the East
  • Higher returns to education in the East than
    West difference especially large for urban areas
  • Gender difference and public sector premium are
    lower in East, likely pointing to better labor
    market integration

17
Economic concentration increasing over time
  • Clustering of formal sector employment around
    Dhaka and Chittagong
  • Large increase in formal sector employment in
    East from 2003 to 2006
  • In areas to the north and west of Dhaka City
    Corporation, but not the city center
  • Rapid economic expansion to the north and west of
    Dhaka city (Gazipur, Savar)
  • cheaper land and labor, less congestion, while
    allowing firms to exploit the spillovers and
    positive externalities from Dhaka city

18
Why has the East-West economic gap expanded?
  • Empirical evidence suggests the following story
  • Increasing agglomeration of high-return economic
    activities at growth poles have led to strong
    spillover effects in surrounding areas and higher
    incomes within East
  • East-West differences have expanded because West
    is handicapped by the absence of growth poles,
    poor connectivity with urban centers, and
    deficient public infrastructure and markets
  • While the better-endowed households from West can
    respond to the economic opportunities in East by
    migrating, the poor are mostly unable to overcome
    barriers to their mobility
  • Poverty incidence also varies widely within East
    or West
  • Agro-climatic factors affecting specific areas
    e.g. Chars, Chittagong Hill Tracts, salinity of
    land in south
  • Vulnerability to natural disasters/seasonal
    shocks areas with higher risk of cyclone or
    monga more likely to be poor

19
Human development current challengesMalnutrition
continues to be strikingly high
  • High malnutrition compared to countries of same
    income level
  • Between 1996-97 and 2006, nutritional gains
    plateauing in terms of of underweight children
  • Fortification of basic staples in nutritional
    program may be key to further nutritional gains

20
Inequities persist in health service utilization
  • Several indicators show increasing equity divide
    in health service utilization despite gains
    overall, e.g.
  • Immunization
  • Ante-natal care from a medical trained provider
  • Deliveries at both public and private facilities
  • Access to care hindered by challenges in human
    resources, despite extensive network of
    facilities
  • Absenteeism of staff
  • Ratio of nursing staff to doctors remains low

21
Mixed progress in education since 2000
  • Little change in primary gross enrollment since
    90 enrollment rate attained in 2000
  • But pattern of late entry into school over 30
    of children of primary school going age not
    attending primary
  • Substantial growth in secondary enrollment (52
    to 62 from 2000 to 2005).
  • However, completion rates declining with rising
    rich-poor gap only 6-7 of the poor have
    completed secondary schooling
  • Public education expenditure per student
    significantly lower than other countries in SAsia
  • Appears to be compensated by high private tuition
    expenditures which worsen inequalities
  • Room to make expenditures more pro-poor (e.g.
    primary stipend program benefits large share of
    non-poor)

22
Regional patterns in human development
  • Human dev outcomes in poorer divisions are often
    better
  • E.g. child mortality is lowest in Barisal and
    secondary enrollment is highest in Khulna Sylhet
    is lagging behind in most HD indicators (e.g.
    girls secondary enrolment, infant mortality rate)
  • The contradiction between economic and social
    outcomes do differences in social
    norms/conservatism play a role?

23
How do households cope with shocks?
  • Rapid national survey of 2,000 households to
    assess the impact of rice price shock (July,
    2008)
  • The way households cope may have longer-term
    adverse consequences for productive assets and
    human capital
  • 76 of households reduced quantity of food
    intake 88 switched to lower quality food
  • 8 took children out of school 39 reduced
    education expenses
  • 45 drew upon savings or pawned belongings

24
Therefore the need for effective safety nets
  • Government has raised safety net expenditures
    steadily since mid-1990s
  • But public resource allocation across divisions
    is puzzling
  • Not consistent with poverty incidence e.g. 22
    of households in Sylhet safety net beneficiaries
    while national average is 13
  • Low coverage and transfer values
  • Even among bottom 10, less than one-fourth
    receive any safety net benefit
  • Little coverage of urban poor except for OMS

25
Looking ahead accelerating the pace of poverty
reduction
  • (A) Raising growth beyond 7
  • Stable macro and political environment, removing
    infrastructure bottlenecks, export
    diversification, greater female participation in
    labor force and sustaining remittance growth
  • Investments to raise agricultural productivity
    (closing the yield gap with other developing
    countries) will reduce regional disparity since
    lagging areas rely disproportionately on
    agriculture
  • (B) Spreading growth to lagging regions
  • Investment in physical infrastructure (roads,
    Padma bridge) to improve access to markets and
    existing growth poles
  • Investment in urban infrastructure and services
    in lagging regions
  • Investment in human capital/skills conditional
    transfer programs can serve dual (safety net and
    human devlopment) objectives
  • Improving access to remittances by reducing
    barriers to migration
  • Spatially targeted incentives and complementary
    investments to spur the creation of regional
    growth poles

26
Looking ahead (cont.)
  • (C) Moderating population growth rates, tackling
    malnutrition and infant and maternal mortality
  • Measures to increase use of contraceptives,
    scaling up demand side interventions (e.g.
    maternal care voucher pilot) and provision of
    fortified food
  • (D) Reducing inequities in education and
    strengthening quality
  • Raising public education spending in line with
    regional benchmarks and focus on access by poor,
    preventing drop-outs and strengthening links with
    labor market
  • (E) Expanded role for safety nets
  • Current fiscal allocation for safety nets can be
    used to expand benefits to most needy by
    improving targeting and consolidating programs
    under an umbrella body
  • Regional allocation of safety net resources need
    to be aligned better with poverty incidence
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