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Poverty, Undernutrition, and Famines

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3) Best way of delivering aid to a famine-stricken region (Coate 1989) ... Now suppose that the famine-stricken region is experiencing a surplus of food ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Poverty, Undernutrition, and Famines


1
Poverty, Undernutrition, and Famines
  • In the first part of this course we have been
    dealing with poverty, growth, institutions, and
    microfinance
  • But we have not yet seen many other dimensions of
    poverty, which are crucial for policy
  • In particular, in todays class
  • How can we accurately measure the extent of
    poverty
  • What causes acute levels of undernutrition and
    famines?
  • How can one best deliver aid to a famine-stricken
    region?

2
1) Measuring Poverty
  • Measuring poverty based on the notion of a
    poverty line
  • Five concerns
  • Expenditure or item-by-item consumption?
  • Absolute or relative?
  • Temporary or chronic?
  • Households or individuals
  • A fixed notion?

3
  • Head count
  • Head count ratio
  • Poverty gap ratio

4
(c) Income gap ratio
Note All ignore relative depravation
5
2) Causes of poverty
  • Lack of assets and undernutrition, obviously
    interconnected
  • Energy input
  • Nutrition and work capacity
  • Discrimination against females, both adults and
    children
  • Credit and Insurance

6
3) Famines and aid
  • A. Sen argues that a distinction should be made
    between starvation and famines, and
  • That starvation and famines are not due to FAD,
    but distribution
  • Food entitlements depend on individuals assets
    and the amount of food individuals can obtain via
    exchange
  • Below a certain threshold, individuals unable to
    acquire food against those assets, and can
    therefore experience starvation and famines

7
3) Best way of delivering aid to a
famine-stricken region (Coate 1989) Note we
are dealing with aggregate shocks here
  • First Who are the vulnerable?
  • Three possible scenarios, easy to distinguish
    the vulnerable
  • A rural region populated by large and small
    scale subsistence farmers, and suppose that there
    is a crop failure
  • A rural region populated by farmers and landless
    laborers, and there is a bad harvest
  • A rural region populated by high and low wage
    earners, and food prices increase

8
Suppose an scenario where famine- stricken region
is originally exporting food, importing food, or
neitherAnd suppose that an aid agency wishes to
minimize mortality rates
9
Now suppose that the famine-stricken region is
experiencing a surplus of food and is originally
exporting food. Are cash handouts a good strategy?
10
Now suppose that a famine-stricken region is
originally importing food. Are cash handouts a
good strategy?
11
Now suppose that a famine stricken region is
neither importing nor exporting food. Are cash
handouts a good strategy?
12
In Sens view Famines can be prevented via
  • Employment creation
  • Public holdings of food stock
  • Health
  • Education
  • Clean water and sanitation
  • DR adds
  • Land reforms
  • Human capital
  • ? Next Class Population and Rural Urban
    Migration (Consult syllabus)
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