Is Green Growth Good for the Poor?
The developing world is experiencing substantial environmental change, and climate change is likely to accelerate these processes in the coming decades. Due to their initial poverty and their relatively high dependence on environmental capital for...
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Format: | Policy Research Working Paper |
Language: | English en_US |
Published: |
World Bank, Washington, DC
2014
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Online Access: | http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2014/06/19705684/green-growth-good-poor http://hdl.handle.net/10986/18822 |
Summary: | The developing world is experiencing
substantial environmental change, and climate change is
likely to accelerate these processes in the coming decades.
Due to their initial poverty and their relatively high
dependence on environmental capital for their livelihoods,
the poor are likely to suffer most due to their low
resources for mitigation and investment in adaptation.
Economic growth is essential for any large-scale poverty
reduction. Green growth, a growth process that is sensitive
to environmental and climate change concerns, can be
particularly helpful in this respect. We focus on the
possible trade-offs between the greening of growth and
poverty reduction, and we highlight the sectoral and spatial
processes behind effective poverty reduction. High labor
intensity, declining shares of agriculture in GDP and
employment, migration, and urbanization are essential
features of poverty-reducing growth. We contrast some common
and stylized green-sensitive growth ideas related to
agriculture, trade, technology, infrastructure, and urban
development with the requirements of poverty-sensitive
growth. We find that these ideas may cause a slowdown in the
effectiveness of growth to reduce poverty. The main lesson
is that trade-offs are bound to exist; they increase the
social costs of green growth and should be explicitly
addressed. If they are not addressed, green growth may not
be good for the poor, and the poor should not be asked to
pay the price for sustaining growth while greening the planet. |
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