1 / 21

Aceh Poverty Assessment The impact of the Conflict, the Tsunami and Reconstruction on Poverty in Aceh

Aceh Poverty Assessment The impact of the Conflict, the Tsunami and Reconstruction on Poverty in Aceh. Main messages. Poverty increased slightly in 2005 and had declined to below pre-tsunami levels in 2006, facilitated by the end of conflict and reconstruction activities;

miakoda
Télécharger la présentation

Aceh Poverty Assessment The impact of the Conflict, the Tsunami and Reconstruction on Poverty in Aceh

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Aceh Poverty AssessmentThe impact of the Conflict, the Tsunami and Reconstruction on Poverty in Aceh

  2. Main messages • Poverty increased slightly in 2005 and had declined to below pre-tsunami levels in 2006, facilitated by the end of conflict and reconstruction activities; • Poverty in Aceh is a rural phenomenon. A large number of Acehnese remain vulnerable to poverty (living just above poverty line); • The abundance of natural resource has not resulted in higher growth rates or lower poverty levels; • Aceh will have the necessary resources to combat poverty and promote economic growth, but efficient allocation of resources is key for success.

  3. Methodology (i) • Two principal data sources: (i) Susenas, a large scale household survey fielded annually by BPS in the whole of Aceh and (ii) STAR, special purpose longitudinal survey re-contacting a selection of 2004 Susenas households in tsunami affected areas • SUSENAS records several dimensions of welfare: household composition, characteristics, and consumption as well as access to health and education services

  4. Methodology (ii) • We start with BPS poverty lines in 2004. For 2005 and 2006, to provide a welfare consistent update we: (1) determine a consumption bundle representative to the poor in urban and rural areas, (2) apply these consumption weights to monthly BPS urban price series. • Limitations of this approach: (i) price changes are measured only in Banda Aceh and Lhokseumawe, so poverty at the district level might not be accurately estimated and (ii) small sample size at the district level makes inferences valid only at the province level

  5. Poverty increased in 2005, but by 2006 had declined below pre-tsunami levels

  6. The relatively low poverty increases in 2005 masks large differences in tsunami and conflict affected areas The relative odds of poverty by kecamatan classification of high or low tsunami and high or low conflict, 2004-06, show that the likelihood of being poor in Aceh increased significantly in tsunami and conflict affected areas in 2005, but it was not significant any more by 2006.

  7. A large share of the population lives just above the poverty line – a small shock can send them below the poverty line Cumulative Distribution Function for rural Aceh, 2004-06

  8. Pre-tsunami, poverty in Banda Aceh and surrounding districts was significantly lower…

  9. Poverty increased in many districts in 2005, but decreased in most in 2006 2005 2006

  10. Characteristics of the poor in Aceh are similar to the poor in other parts in Indonesia Source: BPS data and World Bank staff calculations. Note: ++/-- indicates statistical significance at the 1% or 5% level, +/- significance at the 10% level.

  11. Aceh has had slow growth rates for most of the decade, mostly due to conflict and declining gas extraction

  12. Aceh’s economy continued to decline from 2001-05, as the rest of Indonesia recovered from the financial crisis

  13. As a result, poverty continued to increase in Aceh while it declined in most of Indonesia

  14. Poverty growth elasticity in Aceh is one third of the rest of Indonesia – normal for economies reliant on natural resources

  15. … availability of oil and gas does not necessarily translate into lower poverty levels

  16. Aceh will have the necessary resources to combat poverty and promote economic growth

  17. Education per capita public expenditure is the second highest in the country (2004)

  18. Health per capita public expenditure is well above the national level (2004)

  19. But both education and health outcomes are not significantly better than in the rest of the country… …signaling the need to improve the efficiency of spending Graduation rates 2004/05 Immunization Coverage in Aceh vs. Indonesia

  20. Priorities for Poverty Alleviation (i) • Longer-term development efforts should focus on the poorest areas of Aceh, in particular those in the rural interior and more remote areas. Current focus on tsunami affected areas might have to be revised; • Any poverty alleviation strategy should focus on increasing the productivity of the agricultural and fisheries sectors, as well as a strategy to improve the capabilities of the poor and linking them to growth poles in urban areas; • The Government of Aceh should diversify the economy away from natural resources and increase transparency of the distribution and use of revenues.

  21. Priorities for Poverty Alleviation (ii) • The Government of Aceh should invest in a strong civil service that ensures an efficient allocation of resources, as well as the provision of quality public services; • Given Aceh’s large resources and opportunities, spending patters should be improved. Scrutinize increased spending on government administration and the civil service wage bill; • Education and health spending is very high, but efficiency of spending can be improved. In all sectors, better planning and budgeting should align needs identified with allocation of resources.

More Related