Poverty in Mozambique : New Evidence from Recent Household Surveys
This paper has three primary objectives: (i) to investigate potential problems regarding Mozambique's most recent nationally representative household survey on poverty dynamics; (ii) to assess the robustness and reliability of official poverty...
Main Authors: | , , , |
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Format: | Policy Research Working Paper |
Language: | English en_US |
Published: |
World Bank, Washington, DC
2013
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Subjects: | |
Online Access: | http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2012/10/16793468/poverty-mozambique-new-evidence-recent-household-poverty-mozambique-new-evidence-recent-household http://hdl.handle.net/10986/12050 |
Summary: | This paper has three primary objectives:
(i) to investigate potential problems regarding
Mozambique's most recent nationally representative
household survey on poverty dynamics; (ii) to assess the
robustness and reliability of official poverty statistics;
and (iii) to provide alternative estimates of poverty and
welfare indicators in light of the methodological and
analytical issues raised in areas (i) and (ii). It is
determined that at least two significant weaknesses affect
the official poverty-rate estimates: measurement errors in
consumption data and flaws in the methodology used to
calculate poverty lines (the cost-of-basic-needs approach
based on provincial food bundles with entropy correction). A
number of observations appear to be affected by substantial
measurement errors, which severely distort the official
poverty statistics. The paper provides methods to correct
the consumption distribution by recalculating poverty lines
based on a single national food basket -- as opposed to the
current estimates, which are based on province-specific food
baskets. The revised poverty statistics differ considerably
from the official estimates of poverty across provinces and
are far more consistent with other poverty indicators. In
addition, poverty appears to be highly concentrated in
certain areas, with dramatically higher rates found in
Central and Northern Mozambique, as well as in rural areas
overall, compared with relatively low rates in Southern
Mozambique and in the country's urban centers. These
findings substantially contradict the government's
official poverty figures, which appear to systematically
overestimate poverty rates in Mozambique's Southern
provinces and urban areas while simultaneously
underestimating the prevalence of poverty in the
country's Central and Northern regions and in rural
areas nationwide. |
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