scholarly journals The economics of poverty traps and persistent poverty: An asset-based approach

2006 ◽  
Vol 42 (2) ◽  
pp. 178-199 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michael R. Carter ◽  
Christopher B. Barrett
Author(s):  
Dylan Fitz ◽  
Shyam Gouri Suresh

AbstractPoverty trap studies help explain the simultaneous escape from poverty by some households and regions alongside deep and persistent poverty elsewhere. However, researchers remain divided about how important poverty traps are in explaining the range of poverty dynamics observed in various contexts. We build a theoretical model that integrates micro-, meso-, and macro-level poverty traps, allowing us to analyze the ways in which multiple layers of poverty traps interact and reinforce each other. Through this simulation model, markets and institutions arise endogenously and help certain individuals escape poverty, while others remain persistently poor. In addition to one’s own productivity and initial capital levels, we explore how individual opportunity and income can be heavily determined by market access and institutional factors beyond one’s control. Using simulation results from controlled experiments, we can identify the role played by meso- and macro-conditions (that correspond to local markets and country-wide institutions, respectively) in helping individuals escape poverty. Our results suggest that even in a parsimonious model—with optimizing, forward-looking agents operating in a world with only one trap at each level—local and national context matters immensely and combines to determine individual opportunity in complex ways.


Author(s):  
Martin Ravallion ◽  
Jyotsna Jalan
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Author(s):  
Aart Kraay ◽  
David McKenzie
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Author(s):  
Rodney Schmidt

This paper synthesizes and develops research undertaken by participants in The North-South Institute project, "Macroeconomic policy choices for growth and poverty reduction" in low- income developing countries.1 The project analysed the features of poverty and growth in seven poor countries of varying circumstances and proposed macroeconomic and growth policies for poverty reduction for them. The research was guided by the question: "How does poverty inform growth strategy?" Our research provides evidence of the channels through which growth and distribution or poverty processes depend on each other and respond to policy together. We encapsulate the messages of these case studies in the following six propositions, discussed at length in the paper: i) macroeconomic stability reduces poverty; ii) land redistribution enhances growth; iii) income poverty traps constrain growth; iv) urban-rural growth disparities drive income inequality; v) regional poverty traps resist growth, and vi) ley growth policies can aggravate poverty gaps.  The propositions suggest growth policies that may be either of two types in terms of impact on growth and distribution. They have the potential to enhance both growth and distribution (win-win) or to enhance growth while aggravating income gaps or vice versa (win-lose).


Author(s):  
Abiin Garcca-Rodrrguez ◽  
Fernando SSnchez Losada
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2017 ◽  
Vol 50 (30) ◽  
pp. 3300-3314 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jian-Xin Wu ◽  
Ling-Yun He

2021 ◽  
Vol 144 ◽  
pp. 105437
Author(s):  
Sonja Radosavljevic ◽  
L. Jamila Haider ◽  
Steven J. Lade ◽  
Maja Schlüter
Keyword(s):  

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