Understanding and Reducing Persistent Poverty in Africa
Price: $39.95
Add to Cart- ISBN: 978-0-415-46389-8
- Binding: Paperback (also available in Hardback)
- Published by: Routledge
- Publication Date: 24th December 2007
- Pages: 256
About the Book
Prior work has shown that there is a significant amount of turnover amongst the African poor as households exit and enter poverty. Some of this mobility can be attributed to regular movement back and forth in response to exogenous variability in climate, prices, health, etc. ('churning'). Other crossings of the poverty line reflect permanent shifts in long-term well-being associated with gains or losses of productive assets or permanent changes in asset productivity due, for example, to adoption of improved technologies or access to new, higher-value markets. Distinguishing true structural mobility from simple churning is important because it clarifies the factors that facilitate such important structural change. Conversely, it also helps identify the constraints that may leave other households caught in a trap of persistent, structural poverty.
The papers in this book help to distinguish the types of poverty and to deepen understanding of the structural features and constraints that create poverty traps. Such an understanding allows communities, local governments and donors to take proactive, effective steps to combat persistent poverty in Africa.
This book was previously published as a special issue of the Journal of Development Studies.
Table of Contents
Understanding and Reducing Persistent Poverty in Africa: Introduction to the Special Issue. The Economics of Poverty Traps and Persistent Poverty: An Asset Based Approach. ‘Moving in Place’: Drought and Poverty Dynamics in South Wollo, Ethiopia. Exploring Poverty Traps and Social Exclusion in South Africa Using Qualitative and Quantitative Data. Welfare Dynamics in Rural Kenya and Madagascar. Persistent Poverty in North East Ghana. Shocks and their Consequences Across and Within Households in Rural Zimbabwe. Rural Income and Poverty in a Time of Radical Change in Malawi. Escaping Poverty and Becoming Poor in Thirty-Six Villages in Central and Western Uganda.
About the Author(s)
Christopher Barrett is International Professor in the Department of Applied Economics and Management and Co-Director of theAfrican Food Security and Natural Resources Management Program at Cornell University and Editor of the American Journal ofAgricultural Economics.
Peter Little is Professor and Chair, Department of Anthropology at the University of Kentucky.
Michael R. Carter is Professor in the Department of Agricultural and Applied Economics at the University of Wisconsin –Madison, Director of the BASIS Collaborative Research Program, and Associate Editor (microeconomics) for World Development.
