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Implications of the Third National Poverty Assessment . Channing Arndt and Finn Tarp University of Copenhagen. Data, Definitions, and Methods. Data: The principle new source is the 2008/09 Household Budget Survey ( IOF08 ). Combined with:
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Implications of the Third National Poverty Assessment Channing Arndt and Finn Tarp University of Copenhagen
Data, Definitions, and Methods • Data: The principle new source is the 2008/09 Household Budget Survey (IOF08). Combined with: • Previous household budget surveys (IAF02, IAF96) • Demographic and health type surveys (MICS08, DHS03, DHS97) • Agricultural production and income surveys (TIA02– TIA08 when available) • Other such SIMA, National Accounts, and administrative data.
Poverty • A multi-dimensional phenomenon. • Impossible to capture all dimensions with a single indicator. • Multiple indicators • Multiple perspectives • Strongly related to context and social norms.
Consumption Poverty- Method • Same method employed in First, Second, and Third Assessments. • STEPS: • Calculate per capita consumption for each household in the survey. • Divide Mozambique into 13 relatively homogeneous spatial domains. • In each domain, estimate a poverty line with two components: the food poverty line and the non-food poverty line. • Food poverty line is obtained by deriving a bundle of food products that: • reflects consumption patterns of poor households within the spatial domain, • provides approximately 2150 calories per person per day, and • passes a series of spatial and temporal revealed preference conditions that ensure comparability in the quality of the bundle across space and time (not done in 1996-97).
Consumption Poverty – Method (2) • Calculate prices paid by the poor for the elements of the bundles. • The food poverty line is then simply the cost of the bundle. • Calculate average non-food consumption share for households living near the food poverty line . • Derive total and non-food poverty lines using the food poverty line and the non-food share.
Limitations • The consumption measure developed applies to households and not individuals (resource allocation between household members). • The estimated total consumption of any given household makes no reference to the composition of consumption (resource allocation by the household). • Consumption of all public services is excluded.
Notes • In the rural North and Centre, where 58% of the population is concentrated, 90% and 85% of the populations respectively reside in households with none of the four improvements shown. • The use value of durable goods represents a small share of total consumption with a median value of about 1.2% in rural areas and 3.1% in urban areas in 2008/09.
Possible Explanations • Enumerators utterly failed to track consumption of some households. • Some classes of consumption difficult to obtain and/or not appearing on the consumption register. • Quantities understated but not values. • Behavior of households under stress. • Household really did consume low quantities of calories.
International Comparisons(mean calorie consumption per capita)
Summary • Accumulated evidence indicates likelihood of calorie undercounting (or food consumption underreporting particularly [but not exclusively] in urban areas and in Maputo). • Food consumption is more difficult to track in urban areas (Deaton 2005). • Levels of poverty change after correction (lower in urban zones in particular). • Trends are virtually identical across all correction procedures.
TIA Data Bases NOTAS: dados referem-se apenas à produção das culturas alimentares feita pelos pequenas e médias fazendas. Base populacaional é a população rural. Fonte: MPD/DNEAP com base no anuário estatístico dos TIAs (MINAG, preliminar)
Simulated Poverty Rates Based on the CGE Model Taxa de pobreza (%)
Poverty Rates: Actual and Simulated • The Gini coefficient in the model rises to around 43.5 or two points above the estimates of 2002-03 and 2008-09.
Consistency Summary • Nacional • MICS • TIA • National accounts/model/inequality • Provincial • CPI • SIMA • Assets • Number of meals per day • Food shares • Declarations of Mozambicans
(VI) Conclusões e implicações • Estagnação (nacional) da pobreza de consumo desde 2002 relaciona-se com: • Falta do crescimento da produtividade agrícola, particularmente no sector familiar • Aumentos graves dos preços internacionais • Choques climaticos • Amarelecimento letal do coqueiro • HIV/SIDA • Estes factores eram mais graves no Centro do país • Melhorias significativas da pobreza não monetária • Tendências positivas do longo prazo – conforme esperado • Corresponde com as areas da prioridade do Governo (educação, saúde etc.)
(VI) Conclusões e implicações • Altos níveis de vulnerabilidade económica • Indicadores da desnutrição infantil continuam a ser persistentemente altos (consequencias serias para o crescimento a longo prazo) • Fluctuação substancial da produção agrícola devido à dependência da qualidade das chuvas e ao fraco acesso às tecnologias melhoradas • Prioridade é de estimular o sector agrícola familiar • O principal fonte de alimentação e rendimento para a população • O consumo dos alimentos representa 75% do consumo total dos pobres
(VI) Conclusões e implicações • Se conseguir estimular o sector agrícola familiar, Moçambique ainda pode reduzir a incidência da pobreza até 40% em 2015 • Conforme a Meta do Desenvolvimento do Milénio • Medição melhorada do consumo poderá aumentar a precisão da estimativa do nível de pobreza absoluta no Sul e nos centros urbanos (mas não alterará as tendencias e as implicações gerais) • Com precos internacionais estabelicidos e uma colheita razoável em 2009, a pobreza absoluta provavelmente é abaixo de 50% agora
Public Roles in Agriculture • Research • Extension • Provision of information • Market prices • Production levels (forecasts and finals) • Disease control (livestock and plant) • Land titling • Open pollinated seed • Associations • Grades and standards • Basic economic infrastructure (roads, ports, airports, …) • Emergencies, shocks, disasters.
Private/Public Domains in Agriculture‘Pump Priming’ • Rural credit • Inputs • Fertilizer • Pesticides • Hybrid seeds • Irrigation
Urban Issues/Employment • Agricultural policy is an important tool for influencing urban development. • Rate of rural/urban migration • Food prices • Business environment/tax policy • Poles of urban growth beyond Maputo • Leveraging natural resource investments • Labor intensive exports • Urban planning/investments
Other measures • Social protection • For practical purposes, mostly confined to urban areas. • Much better than untargeted subsidies. • Potentially expensive (requires careful design and consideration of fiscal implications) • Child malnutrition • Information • Proactive promotion of public health
Information Systems • Insufficient frequency of surveys • Six years leaves long information gaps • Fits poorly with planning/budgeting cycle • Renders capacity building more difficult • Effectively precludes a panel dimension • Risk of survey failure or peculiar years • Results in non-official data gathering efforts that usually lack national coverage and frequently are of low quality. • Agricultural statistics • Timeliness • Production forecasts/early warning