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Title: Growth and Poverty Reduction: Pro-poor growth?


1
Growth and Poverty Reduction Pro-poor growth?
2
Growth and Poverty Reduction Pro-poor growth?
  • Lecture Outline
  • (i) What is pro-poor growth?
  • (ii) What are the Theoretical Under-pinning of
    Pro-Poor Growth?
  • (iii) Methodology
  • (iv) Evidence of pro-poor growth?
  • (v) Policies for pro-poor growth 1970s vs.
    present?

3
Growth and Poverty Reduction Pro-poor growth?
  • (i) What is pro-poor growth?
  • Definition of Pro-Poor Growth
  • growth that leads to significant reductions in
    (absolute) poverty
  • (OECD 2001, and UN 2000) italics added in
    brackets.
  • Too broad for economists since what definition
    of poverty do researchers use? Kraay (2004)
    makes this point in his World Bank Working Paper
    No. 3225, When is Growth Pro-Poor?

4
Growth and Poverty Reduction Pro-poor growth?
  • A basic idea from the works of White and
    Anderson (2001) and Kakwani and Pernia (2000) is
    that any increase in growth should benefit the
    poor more than the rich.
  • This really is inequality-reducing growth
    rather than pro-poor growth is concerned with
    relative poverty.
  • The question is, Should new growth benefit the
    poor more, thus increasing their incomes and thus
    reducing inequality, whilst the rest of society
    sees little income improvement?

5
Growth and Poverty Reduction Pro-poor growth?
  • If, Yes to this then could have the issue of
    national income increasing by 5 but income of
    the poor increasing by 7 whereas there could be
    a possibility of growth for the poor of 7 when
    national income increased by 10.
  • The poor in the second scenario are absolutely
    better off, but are relatively worse-off compared
    to the non-poor In the first scenario the poor
    are absolutely worse-off compared to scenario 2,
    but are relatively better off.

6
Growth and Poverty Reduction Pro-poor growth?
  • (Q) So which one is better?
  • (A) In poor countries better absolute
    improvements preferred to relative improvements,
    at least initially..
  • Problem with the above inequality-reducing
    scenario is that we do not know whether following
    an inequality-reducing growth plan will result in
    lower growth or higher growth.
  • So we want to have improvements in both absolute
    levels of income (absolute poverty tackled) and
    relative levels of income (relative income of
    poor improves and income inequality declines?).

7
Growth and Poverty Reduction Pro-poor growth?
  • Formalising these issues has been undertaken by
    White and Anderson (2001)
  • White and Anderson (2001) 3 definitions of
    pro-poor growth
  • (1) The poors share of incremental income
    exceeds their current share.
  • This means that the incremental increase in the
    level of income to the poorgtincremental increase
    in the level of income for all of society,

8
Growth and Poverty Reduction Pro-poor growth?
  • Where the numerator represents change in income
    of the poor, the denominator is the change in
    income of society and represents the
    income share of the poor in the last time period,
    t-1.

9
Growth and Poverty Reduction Pro-poor growth?
  • So,
  • There is a relative improvement of the poor.
  • This can be shown diagrammatically,

10
Growth and Poverty Reduction Pro-poor growth?
Changes in Y, between t and t-1
change in Y for non-poor between t-1 and t
Y, T growth
change in Y for the poor between t-1 and t If
then pro-poor growth.
t-1
t
Time
11
Growth and Poverty Reduction Pro-poor growth?
  • The problem with definition (1) is that the
    poors share can increase slightly and the
    richest 10 or 15 can still cream off much more
    and this is pro-poor growth.
  • E.g. If poorest 20 have 5 of income and the
    richest 20 have 40 of income then if in every
    extra 1 the poorest get 10cents and the richest
    30cents then still have PPG.
  • If in the above then White and
    Anderson (2001, pp. 269) coin the phrase
    anti-poor growth (APG).

12
Growth and Poverty Reduction Pro-poor growth?
  • (2) The second definition brings into the
    equation the share of people in a country who are
    defined as poor. Formally,
  • Where the P term represents the share of poor
    people/households in the country.
  • What the equation is saying is that the increase
    in the share of the poors incomegtshare of the
    number of poor in the countrys population.

13
Growth and Poverty Reduction Pro-poor growth?
  • Can be re-arranged so that,
  • These represent average income levels of the
    poor and of society, and can be further
    simplified to,

14
Growth and Poverty Reduction Pro-poor growth?
  • The change in average income of poorgtchange in
    average income of society.
  • Problem with definition 2 is that it is too
    restrictive and under this definition few
    countries actually have pro-poor growth.

15
Growth and Poverty Reduction Pro-poor growth?
  • Definition 3
  • Take an international norm of median income
    shares of the bottom 20 and 40 (can choose any
    ).
  • Issue here is that if the poors share
    currently exceeds the international norm then
    their share of incremental income can be less
    than their current share and thus qualify as PPG
    (ibid, pp. 269).

16
Growth and Poverty Reduction Pro-poor growth?
  • Another Definition of Pro-Poor Growth
  • focuses on accelerating the rate of income
    growth of the poor and thus increase the rate of
    poverty reduction
  • (Ravallion and Chen, 2003)
  • Pro-Poor Growth F(GDP growth)
  • Changes in income equality have an ambiguous
    effect on pro-poor growth since can impact on GDP
    growth.
  • Thus, if pro-poor growth is to accelerate then
    need to accelerate growth but also need to
    enhance and make poor households aware of the
    opportunities growth generates.
  • Hence there is no one agreed definition of what
    PPG actually is.hence a huge debate as to
    whether PPG has occurred or not!!

17
Growth and Poverty Reduction Pro-poor growth?
  • (ii) What are the Theoretical Under-pinning of
    Pro-Poor Growth?
  • Gunnar Myrdal in 1920s and 1930s India argued
    that initial income inequality was an important
    factor in improving the quality of people and
    hence productivity.
  • Ravallion and Datt (2002) report larger absolute
    poverty-household income elasticities in
    countries with lower gini indices.

18
Growth and Poverty Reduction Pro-poor growth?
  • (ii) What are the Theoretical Under-pinning of
    Pro-Poor Growth?
  • The idea here is that any growth that does occur
    is likely to benefit more people if income
    inequality is low in the first place.
  • (Q) So what then determines income inequality?
  • Assets particularly land in LDCs
  • Education
  • Networks
  • Rural-Urban
  • Property Rights, Legal System

19
Growth and Poverty Reduction Pro-poor growth?
  • (ii) What are the Theoretical Under-pinnings of
    Pro-Poor Growth? Cont
  • The 1970s
  • In the 1970s the Redistribution with Growth
    development economists believed in the inverted-U
    hypothesis of Kuznets.
  • Kuznets inverted-U of growth and inequality
  • Stage 1 low per capita income level, low income
    inequality.
  • Stage 2 per capita income increases with
    development, income inequality rises.
  • Stage 3 gets to a point where per capita income
    increases with continued development, income
    inequality declines.

20
Growth and Poverty Reduction Pro-poor growth?
  • Evidence from Ahluwalia (1976) supports the
    Kuznets hypothesis, by simply regressing
    inequality onto income and income-squared
  • He found that as economic growth increased so
    income inequality increased ( ) but
    at a decreasing rate ( ) however
    unsure where the turning point is!

Growth
Growth
Inequality
Leads to
21
Growth and Poverty Reduction Pro-poor growth?
  • The Redistribution with Growth economists argued
    (in line with Kaldors growth model) that
    inequality caused growth since the rich had a
    higher marginal propensity to save.
  • Also Lewiss model of economic development with
    unlimited labour supply was consistent with
    rising income inequality through profits of
    entrepreneurs growing more quickly than wages.

22
Growth and Poverty Reduction Pro-poor growth?
  • Empirical Rejection of Kuznets, 1980s-1990s
  • Rejected in Bruno, Ravallion and Squire, (1996)
    since much of the empirical evidence of the 1970s
    and 1980s was flawed, and studies were actually
    capturing between-country effects not
    within-country effects.
  • By using panel estimates country-specific
    effects, time effects and joint country and time
    effects are captured and the Kuznets U-shaped
    curve disappears.
  • Studies find that between-country effects are
    causing the inverted-U shape and that for some
    countries (e.g. India) the relationship between
    inequality and income is simply U-shaped
    Inequality high, then low, then high again as
    growth increases.

23
Growth and Poverty Reduction Pro-poor growth?
  • Currently whilst the theoretical debate
    continues as to whether economic growth causes
    income inequality to change, the empirical
    evidence is stacking up against a correlation in
    the first place.
  • E.g. Deininger and Squire (1996), Chen and
    Ravallion (1997), Easterly (1999), Dollar and
    Kraay (2002) and Deaton (2005). According to
    Fields (1989, 2001),
  • Method should be looking at country-specific
    analysis when Fields (1989) looked at 70 growth
    spells across 20 countries he found that
    inequality rose in 10 countries, decreased in 11
    and remained unchanged in 1.
  • income inequality increased in about half the
    growth spells and declined in the other half.
  • (World Bank, 2005, pp.17)

24
Growth and Poverty Reduction Pro-poor growth?
  • New Theories of Pro-Poor Growth?
  • Initial income inequality feeds into poor growth
    or greater income equality positively affects
    growth rates.
  • Based largely on the conflicting progress of
    East Asia (e.g. South Korea and Taiwan) and Latin
    America.
  • Latin America notoriously unequal in income
    distribution (Brazil regularly found to have the
    highest Gini coefficient).

High Initial Inequality
Low Growth
25
Growth and Poverty Reduction Pro-poor growth?
  • This means that any growth benefits the rich
    only and tends to be skills-biased and capital
    intensive, thus the poor have no chance of
    getting a piece of the expanding pie relative
    poverty increasing.
  • The income inequality also means that
    consumption is relatively low since the rich have
    low MPC which negatively effects AD and growth.

26
Growth and Poverty Reduction Pro-poor growth?
  • East-Asia growth of the 1960s and beyond has
    seen no conflict between growth and income
    distribution, meaning income inequality remains
    constant as growth increased.
  • (Q) Is there a theory that can explain this?
  • (1) The mechanism given for this income
    inequality-neutral path is that low initial
    income inequality results in more evenly
    distributed economic growth.
  • The reason is that consumption expenditure
    patterns are similar amongst the poor for goods
    which they themselves produce hence generating
    demand for these labour-intensive products hence
    mass consumption takes off rather than
    consumption being driven by the minority.
  • (2) Also the case that savings of the poor can
    be channelled if appropriate investment
    opportunities are in evidence.

27
Growth and Poverty Reduction Pro-poor growth?
  • (iii) Methodology
  • Dominant Method - Cross-Country Studies (Time
    Series and Panels).
  • Has growth affected absolute poverty, relative
    poverty and been pro-poor or not.

28
Growth and Poverty Reduction Pro-poor growth?
  • Method I Cross-Country Studies
  • White and Anderson (2001) find a negative
    relationship between growth and income growth of
    the poor i.e. growth negatively effects the
    portion/share of income the poorest of the
    population get.

29
Growth and Poverty Reduction Pro-poor growth?
  • Back to the pro-poor question and for this see
    White and Anderson (2001)
  • Regress changes in income of the poor as a share
    of changes in total income of country,
  • and changes in share of income of the poor,
  • onto a number of regressors that include, change
    in GDP per capita, change in trade openness
    dummy, change government expenditure as share of
    GDP, change in political rights and civil
    liberties, and change in life expectancy.
  • Why 2 dependent variables? Dependent variable 1
    can be affected by outliers represented by large
    changes in incomes of the poorest groups when
    total income for the country has increased.
    Changes in the poors share of income gets around
    this issue.

30
Growth and Poverty Reduction Pro-poor growth?
  • White and Anderson (2001) (cont)
  • Find that variations in the poors share of
    incremental income (Dependent variable 1) is very
    large for growth rateslt4..........some
    incremental shares are negative and very large.
  • Confirms our expectations.
  • However using dependent variable 2 find that,

31
Growth and Poverty Reduction Pro-poor growth?
Regression results for Change in Share of Income
(poorest 40 and poorest 20 - t-tests in
brackets
DQ40 DQ20
Constant -0.001 0.000
(-0.76) (-0.40)
Growth (if improves) -0.056 -0.011
(-2.03) (-1.03)
Change in Political Freedom (if worsens) -0.006 -0.002
(-1.97) (-1.53)
Trade Openness -0.001 -0.001
(-0.94) (-1.30)
Change in Urban (more urbanisation) 0.003 0.002
(2.41) (3.41)
Change in life expectancy (greater life expectancy) -0.006 -0.002
(-1.85) (-1.57)

32
Growth and Poverty Reduction Pro-poor growth?
  • Note
  • (1) Positive coefficient means an increase in
    the explanatory variable will have a positive
    impact on the poors share of GDP, i.e. improve
    the poors share of GDP
  • Find that growth negatively impacts on the poor
    only the poorest 40 though. Implication is
    there is a trade-off between growth and
    distribution which contradicts World Bank
    thinking.
  • Less political freedom bad for the poor.
  • Increased urbanisation good for the poor

33
Growth and Poverty Reduction Pro-poor growth?
  • Dollar and Kraay (2002, 2004) find a positive
    relationship between growth and growth of incomes
    of the poor.
  • The Model
  • The key thing is the coefficient on .
    This represents the elasticity of income of the
    poorest quintile with respect to mean income.
  • Control for 4 policy interventions that are
    likely to positively contribute to PPG (1)
    primary educational attainment (2) public
    spending on health and education, (3) labour
    productivity in agriculture relative to rest of
    economy and (4) formal democratic institutions.
  • Find none of these factors impact on PPG in
    their cross-country survey.

34
Growth and Poverty Reduction Pro-poor growth?
  • That the coefficient on log GDP of the country
    is NOT significantly different from 1..NO
    evidence that change in GDP is different from
    change in GDP of poorest 20.
  • They cannot reject the hypothesis that incomes
    of the poor on average rise equiproportionately
    with average incomes (pp. 198), See next slide
    for Table 5 that confirms this.

35
Growth and Poverty Reduction Pro-poor growth?
36
Growth and Poverty Reduction Pro-poor
growth?Figure 4, Dollar and Kraay (2004).
37
Growth and Poverty Reduction Pro-poor growth?
  • Finds that changes in inequality and changes in
    income are not correlated.
  • (Word of warning given by authors and by others
    is that cross-country comparisons are subject to
    a lot of measurement error and that
    country-specific studies are required for a
    clearer picture What the World Bank has done).
  • Dollar and Kraay (2004), Economic Journal paper
    in special edition of linkages between trade,
    development and poverty.

38
Growth and Poverty Reduction Pro-poor growth?
  • Whilst not explicitly looking at income
    inequality Dollar and Kraay findings are
    consistent with headcount poverty declining more
    in those countries with more equitable
    distributions of income.
  • Example from Klasen (2003).
  • Since Dollar and Kraay are looking at
    proportionate income changes of the average and
    the poorest quintile then clearly if income
    inequality is lower in a country then the
    proportionate increase in income will lead to a
    greater reduction in absolute poverty.

39
Growth and Poverty Reduction Pro-poor growth?
  • Barro (2000) tests the Kuznets hypothesis again
    with a panel of countries.
  • Regresses growth rate per capita output onto
    variables that theoretically are predicted to
    determine growth, e.g. log of per capita GDP,
    rule-of-law index, democracy (or freedom) index,
    investment/GDP, years of schooling.
  • Then includes a gini coefficient index.

40
Growth and Poverty Reduction Pro-poor growth?
Model 1
Model 2
Model 3
  • Growth rate is the dependent variable here.
  • When the gini index is introduced linearly there
    is no relationship with growth (0.000) Model 1.
  • When the gini index is interacted with log(GDP)
    a proxy for economic development then we see
    a negative relationship between income inequality
    and growth (-0.328) but that when log(GDP) is
    higher the relationship is actually positive
    (0.043) Model 2.
  • Implication is that at lower levels of log(GDP)
    income inequality does significantly impact on
    growth rates.

41
Growth and Poverty Reduction Pro-poor growth?
  • Barro also finds evidence that Kuznets curve is
    alive and kicking. Income inequality first
    increases and then decreases with economic
    development (log(GDP)).

However log(GDP) is not explaining the majority
of the variation in income inequality across
countries or across time.
42
Growth and Poverty Reduction Pro-poor growth?
  • Summary
  • Still no consensus.
  • Some find that changes in income are not
    correlated with changes in inequality means that
    any growth in income does not appear to have any
    impact on inequality and impacts positively on
    absolute poverty, (see Fields, 1989 and 2001).
  • Dollar and Kraay (2002) find that growth of the
    country positively effects growth of income of
    the poor implication is that growth is thus
    crucial for reducing absolute poverty and the
    number of absolutely poor.
  • White and Anderson (2001) find that when
    dependent variable takes a relative form that
    growth negatively effects the share the poorest
    in a country have of GDP.
  • Barro (2000) finds that income inequality can
    impact on growth rates of very poor countries
    only.

43
Growth and Poverty Reduction Pro-poor growth?
  • (V) Policies for pro-poor growth?
  • Killick (2002) mentions a wish list that would
    enhance pro-poor growth
  • (1) Land reform NOT land grab.
  • (2) Improved access by the poor to education and
    health - public sector, or public-private
    partnership?
  • (3) Micro-credit schemes targeted on the poor
    charity or public sector since is too risky for
    private sector to invest in!
  • (4) Adoption of labour intensive techniques in
    production
  • (5) Agricultural and rural development very
    broad
  • (6) Government expenditure on education and
    health - public sector?
  • (7) Avoidance of macroeconomic crises external
    factors that cannot be avoided, e.g. sustained
    food price increases caused by emerging economies
    changing their diet.
  • (8) Investment in rural infrastructure public
    sector, or public-private partnership?
  • (9) Labour-intensive industrialisation

44
Growth and Poverty Reduction Pro-poor growth?
  • World Bank Report, pp.74.
  • For Agriculture
  • Investments in infrastructure to connect the
    poor, e.g. telecommunications, roads, public
    transport.
  • Strengthen property rights notably of women
    particularly regarding land
  • Create incentive frameworks that do NOT
    discriminate against those economic activities
    the poor are already undertaking
  • Improve technology for food-producers so can
    protect crop. Essential given urban food demand
    increases.
  • Help poor households reduce and cope with risk
    which could encourage greater risk with more
    high-yielding crops (Q) Are poor households
    risk-averse in gambling when times are good and
    risk-taking when times are bad?

45
Growth and Poverty Reduction Pro-poor growth?
  • For Non-agricultural poor
  • Designing labour market rules and regulations
    that balances workers needs with employers
    needs, (ibid, pp. 75) is an issue in many
    Latin American countries where trade unions are
    strong, also the case in South Africa.
  • Access to secondary and girls education
    important for poor households given the growing
    skill bias in non-agricultural employment
    falling fertility rates and rising female labor
    market participation is essential in a pro-poor
    growth strategy (ibid, pp. 75).
  • Quality of investment climate (assumed to be
    determined by macro and trade environment, as
    well as degree of labour market regulation)
    determine quantity and quality of employment.
  • Improved infrastructure for the poor.

46
Growth and Poverty Reduction Pro-poor growth?
  • Factors that affect the success/failure of these
    World Bank policies include
  • Initial income and asset inequality if high
    then can have negative impact on pro-poor growth.
  • Must re-distributebut how? Land reform not land
    grab, transfer payments in the form of state
    pensions to the poor.
  • Importance of agriculture to the poor. Need to
    improve the efficiency of agriculture (e.g.
    technology, co-operatives, training, access to
    financial markets).
  • Since agriculture is affected by climactic
    conditions there needs to be a risk management
    structure in place to protect poor farmers but
    which do encourage more risk-taking (Q) Are
    poor farmers likely to be risk-takers?
  • Delivery of services and capacity of institutions
    to deliver to the poor issue of corruption.

47
Growth and Poverty Reduction Pro-poor growth?
  • References
  • Dollar, D., and Kraay, A., (2002), Growth is
    Good for the Poor, Journal of Economic Growth,
    Vol 7, pp. 195-225.
  • Fields, G., (1989) Changes in Poverty and
    Inequality in Developing Countries, World Bank
    Research Observer 4(2), 167-85.
  • Fields, G., (2001) Distribution and Development
    A New Look at the Developing World, MIT Press.
  • Kakwani and Pernia (2000) What is pro-poor
    growth?, Asian Development Review, Vol 18(1),
    1-16.
  • OECD 2001 Rising to the Global Challenge
    Partnership for Reducing World Poverty.
    Statement by the DAC High Level Meeting, April
    25-26, Paris
  • Ravallion and Chen (2003) Measuring Pro-Poor
    Growth. Economic Letters Vol 78(1), p3-99.
  • White and Anderson (2001) Growth vs
    Redistribution Does the pattern of growth
    matter?., Development Policy Review, Vol 19(3),
    167-289.
  • World Bank, (2005), Pro-Poor Growth in the
    1990s Lessons and Insights from 14 Countries.
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