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 |
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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 |
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Foreign Institution |
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World Bank Open Knowledge Repository |
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World Bank |
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English en_US |
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ABSOLUTE POVERTY ABSOLUTE TERMS ADVERSE IMPACTS AGRICULTURAL GROWTH AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTION AIR POLLUTION AIR QUALITY ALLOCATION ALTERNATIVE GROWTH PATHS ALTERNATIVE INVESTMENTS CAPACITY BUILDING CAPITAL COSTS CAPITAL INVESTMENTS CARBON CARBON ENERGY CLEAN AIR ACT CLEAN ENERGY CLEAN ENERGY ECONOMY CLEAN WATER CLEANER WATER CLIMATE CLIMATE CHANGE CLIMATE RESILIENCE CLIMATIC CONDITIONS COAL COMPARATIVE ADVANTAGE CONSUMERS CONSUMPTION SMOOTHING COST OF FUEL COUNTERFACTUAL DEFORESTATION DEVELOPING COUNTRIES DEVELOPING WORLD DEVELOPMENT ECONOMICS DEVELOPMENT INDICATORS DEVELOPMENT POLICY DEVELOPMENT REPORT DISCOUNT RATE DISCOUNT RATES DISTRIBUTIONAL EFFECTS DROUGHT ECONOMETRICS ECONOMIC ACTIVITIES ECONOMIC ACTIVITY ECONOMIC ASSETS ECONOMIC CHANGE ECONOMIC COOPERATION ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT ECONOMIC DIVERSIFICATION ECONOMIC GROWTH ECONOMIC GROWTH RATES ECONOMIC INTEGRATION ECONOMIC OPPORTUNITIES ECONOMIC PRODUCTIVITY ECONOMIC RECOVERY ECONOMIC RESEARCH ECONOMIC REVIEW PAPERS ECONOMICS EFFICIENCY GAINS ELASTICITY EMISSIONS EMPIRICAL BASIS ENERGY PRODUCTION ENVIRONMENTAL ENVIRONMENTAL BENEFITS ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGES ENVIRONMENTAL COSTS ENVIRONMENTAL DEGRADATION ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACTS ENVIRONMENTAL PROBLEMS ENVIRONMENTAL REGULATION ENVIRONMENTAL REGULATIONS EXPECTED RETURNS EXPORTS EXTERNALITIES EXTERNALITY EXTREME EVENTS EXTREME POVERTY EXTREME WEATHER EXTREME WEATHER EVENTS FARM WORKERS FARMERS FISH FISHERIES FOOD PRICES FOOD SECURITY FOOD SELF-SUFFICIENCY FOSSIL FUELS FRESH WATER FUEL PRICES GDP GDP PER CAPITA GLOBAL POVERTY GROWTH CONTEXT GROWTH MODEL GROWTH POLICIES GROWTH PROCESS GROWTH PROSPECTS GROWTH RATES GROWTH THEORY HIGH GROWTH HIGH POVERTY HUMAN CAPITAL HUMAN CAPITAL INVESTMENT HUMAN DEVELOPMENT HUMAN HEALTH IMPACT ON POVERTY IMPACTS OF CLIMATE CHANGE INCOME INCOME GROWTH INCOME RISK INCOME SMOOTHING INCREASE GROWTH INCREASING RETURNS INCREASING RETURNS TO SCALE INEQUALITY INFORMAL INSURANCE INFORMAL INSURANCE MECHANISMS INFRASTRUCTURE INVESTMENT INSURANCE INSURANCE MARKET INTERGENERATIONAL EQUITY INTERNATIONAL TRADE JOBS LABOR PRODUCTIVITY LIQUIDITY LIVELIHOOD SECURITY LIVING CONDITIONS LIVING STANDARDS LONG RUN LOW-INCOME COUNTRIES LUMP SUM MACROECONOMIC POLICIES MARKET FAILURE MARKET FAILURES MICROECONOMIC ANALYSIS MIDDLE INCOME COUNTRIES MONETARY FUND NATURAL CAPITAL NATURAL RESOURCES NEGATIVE IMPACT OPPORTUNITY COST OPPORTUNITY COSTS OUTPUT GROWTH PERSISTENT POVERTY POLICY INSTRUMENTS POLICY RESEARCH POLITICAL ECONOMY POLLUTION POOR POOR COUNTRIES POOR HOUSEHOLDS POOR POPULATIONS POSITIVE EFFECTS POTENTIAL OUTPUT POVERTY ALLEVIATION POVERTY CHANGE POVERTY DYNAMICS POVERTY IMPACT POVERTY PERSISTENCE POVERTY REDUCTION POVERTY TRAPS POVERTY-REDUCING GROWTH PRICE TAG PRIVATE GOODS PRO-POOR PRO-POOR GROWTH PRODUCERS PRODUCTION PROCESSES PRODUCTIVE ASSETS PRODUCTIVITY GROWTH PROPERTY RIGHTS PUBLIC INVESTMENT PUBLIC SECTOR RAPID GROWTH REAL INCOME REMOTE AREAS RETURNS TO SCALE RICH COUNTRIES RISKS OF CLIMATE CHANGE RURAL RURAL AREAS RURAL LIVELIHOODS RURAL POVERTY RURAL SETTINGS SAFETY NETS SANITATION SAVINGS SECTOR ACTIVITIES SHADOW PRICES SKILLED LABOR SKILLED WORKERS SMALLHOLDER AGRICULTURE SOCIAL COSTS SOCIAL PROTECTION SOIL DEGRADATION SOIL EROSION SPATIAL PROCESSES STRUCTURAL CHANGE SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT TAXATION TECHNOLOGICAL PROGRESS URBAN AREAS URBAN POOR WATER POLLUTION WATER PRICES WATER PRICING WEALTH WELFARE ECONOMICS WELFARE EFFECTS WELFARE GAINS |
spellingShingle |
ABSOLUTE POVERTY ABSOLUTE TERMS ADVERSE IMPACTS AGRICULTURAL GROWTH AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTION AIR POLLUTION AIR QUALITY ALLOCATION ALTERNATIVE GROWTH PATHS ALTERNATIVE INVESTMENTS CAPACITY BUILDING CAPITAL COSTS CAPITAL INVESTMENTS CARBON CARBON ENERGY CLEAN AIR ACT CLEAN ENERGY CLEAN ENERGY ECONOMY CLEAN WATER CLEANER WATER CLIMATE CLIMATE CHANGE CLIMATE RESILIENCE CLIMATIC CONDITIONS COAL COMPARATIVE ADVANTAGE CONSUMERS CONSUMPTION SMOOTHING COST OF FUEL COUNTERFACTUAL DEFORESTATION DEVELOPING COUNTRIES DEVELOPING WORLD DEVELOPMENT ECONOMICS DEVELOPMENT INDICATORS DEVELOPMENT POLICY DEVELOPMENT REPORT DISCOUNT RATE DISCOUNT RATES DISTRIBUTIONAL EFFECTS DROUGHT ECONOMETRICS ECONOMIC ACTIVITIES ECONOMIC ACTIVITY ECONOMIC ASSETS ECONOMIC CHANGE ECONOMIC COOPERATION ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT ECONOMIC DIVERSIFICATION ECONOMIC GROWTH ECONOMIC GROWTH RATES ECONOMIC INTEGRATION ECONOMIC OPPORTUNITIES ECONOMIC PRODUCTIVITY ECONOMIC RECOVERY ECONOMIC RESEARCH ECONOMIC REVIEW PAPERS ECONOMICS EFFICIENCY GAINS ELASTICITY EMISSIONS EMPIRICAL BASIS ENERGY PRODUCTION ENVIRONMENTAL ENVIRONMENTAL BENEFITS ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGES ENVIRONMENTAL COSTS ENVIRONMENTAL DEGRADATION ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACTS ENVIRONMENTAL PROBLEMS ENVIRONMENTAL REGULATION ENVIRONMENTAL REGULATIONS EXPECTED RETURNS EXPORTS EXTERNALITIES EXTERNALITY EXTREME EVENTS EXTREME POVERTY EXTREME WEATHER EXTREME WEATHER EVENTS FARM WORKERS FARMERS FISH FISHERIES FOOD PRICES FOOD SECURITY FOOD SELF-SUFFICIENCY FOSSIL FUELS FRESH WATER FUEL PRICES GDP GDP PER CAPITA GLOBAL POVERTY GROWTH CONTEXT GROWTH MODEL GROWTH POLICIES GROWTH PROCESS GROWTH PROSPECTS GROWTH RATES GROWTH THEORY HIGH GROWTH HIGH POVERTY HUMAN CAPITAL HUMAN CAPITAL INVESTMENT HUMAN DEVELOPMENT HUMAN HEALTH IMPACT ON POVERTY IMPACTS OF CLIMATE CHANGE INCOME INCOME GROWTH INCOME RISK INCOME SMOOTHING INCREASE GROWTH INCREASING RETURNS INCREASING RETURNS TO SCALE INEQUALITY INFORMAL INSURANCE INFORMAL INSURANCE MECHANISMS INFRASTRUCTURE INVESTMENT INSURANCE INSURANCE MARKET INTERGENERATIONAL EQUITY INTERNATIONAL TRADE JOBS LABOR PRODUCTIVITY LIQUIDITY LIVELIHOOD SECURITY LIVING CONDITIONS LIVING STANDARDS LONG RUN LOW-INCOME COUNTRIES LUMP SUM MACROECONOMIC POLICIES MARKET FAILURE MARKET FAILURES MICROECONOMIC ANALYSIS MIDDLE INCOME COUNTRIES MONETARY FUND NATURAL CAPITAL NATURAL RESOURCES NEGATIVE IMPACT OPPORTUNITY COST OPPORTUNITY COSTS OUTPUT GROWTH PERSISTENT POVERTY POLICY INSTRUMENTS POLICY RESEARCH POLITICAL ECONOMY POLLUTION POOR POOR COUNTRIES POOR HOUSEHOLDS POOR POPULATIONS POSITIVE EFFECTS POTENTIAL OUTPUT POVERTY ALLEVIATION POVERTY CHANGE POVERTY DYNAMICS POVERTY IMPACT POVERTY PERSISTENCE POVERTY REDUCTION POVERTY TRAPS POVERTY-REDUCING GROWTH PRICE TAG PRIVATE GOODS PRO-POOR PRO-POOR GROWTH PRODUCERS PRODUCTION PROCESSES PRODUCTIVE ASSETS PRODUCTIVITY GROWTH PROPERTY RIGHTS PUBLIC INVESTMENT PUBLIC SECTOR RAPID GROWTH REAL INCOME REMOTE AREAS RETURNS TO SCALE RICH COUNTRIES RISKS OF CLIMATE CHANGE RURAL RURAL AREAS RURAL LIVELIHOODS RURAL POVERTY RURAL SETTINGS SAFETY NETS SANITATION SAVINGS SECTOR ACTIVITIES SHADOW PRICES SKILLED LABOR SKILLED WORKERS SMALLHOLDER AGRICULTURE SOCIAL COSTS SOCIAL PROTECTION SOIL DEGRADATION SOIL EROSION SPATIAL PROCESSES STRUCTURAL CHANGE SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT TAXATION TECHNOLOGICAL PROGRESS URBAN AREAS URBAN POOR WATER POLLUTION WATER PRICES WATER PRICING WEALTH WELFARE ECONOMICS WELFARE EFFECTS WELFARE GAINS Dercon Stefan Is Green Growth Good for the Poor? |
relation |
Policy Research Working Paper;No. 6936 |
description |
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. |
format |
Publications & Research :: Policy Research Working Paper |
author |
Dercon Stefan |
author_facet |
Dercon Stefan |
author_sort |
Dercon Stefan |
title |
Is Green Growth Good for the Poor? |
title_short |
Is Green Growth Good for the Poor? |
title_full |
Is Green Growth Good for the Poor? |
title_fullStr |
Is Green Growth Good for the Poor? |
title_full_unstemmed |
Is Green Growth Good for the Poor? |
title_sort |
is green growth good for the poor? |
publisher |
World Bank, Washington, DC |
publishDate |
2014 |
url |
http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2014/06/19705684/green-growth-good-poor http://hdl.handle.net/10986/18822 |
_version_ |
1764442785285406720 |
spelling |
okr-10986-188222021-04-23T14:03:49Z Is Green Growth Good for the Poor? Dercon Stefan ABSOLUTE POVERTY ABSOLUTE TERMS ADVERSE IMPACTS AGRICULTURAL GROWTH AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTION AIR POLLUTION AIR QUALITY ALLOCATION ALTERNATIVE GROWTH PATHS ALTERNATIVE INVESTMENTS CAPACITY BUILDING CAPITAL COSTS CAPITAL INVESTMENTS CARBON CARBON ENERGY CLEAN AIR ACT CLEAN ENERGY CLEAN ENERGY ECONOMY CLEAN WATER CLEANER WATER CLIMATE CLIMATE CHANGE CLIMATE RESILIENCE CLIMATIC CONDITIONS COAL COMPARATIVE ADVANTAGE CONSUMERS CONSUMPTION SMOOTHING COST OF FUEL COUNTERFACTUAL DEFORESTATION DEVELOPING COUNTRIES DEVELOPING WORLD DEVELOPMENT ECONOMICS DEVELOPMENT INDICATORS DEVELOPMENT POLICY DEVELOPMENT REPORT DISCOUNT RATE DISCOUNT RATES DISTRIBUTIONAL EFFECTS DROUGHT ECONOMETRICS ECONOMIC ACTIVITIES ECONOMIC ACTIVITY ECONOMIC ASSETS ECONOMIC CHANGE ECONOMIC COOPERATION ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT ECONOMIC DIVERSIFICATION ECONOMIC GROWTH ECONOMIC GROWTH RATES ECONOMIC INTEGRATION ECONOMIC OPPORTUNITIES ECONOMIC PRODUCTIVITY ECONOMIC RECOVERY ECONOMIC RESEARCH ECONOMIC REVIEW PAPERS ECONOMICS EFFICIENCY GAINS ELASTICITY EMISSIONS EMPIRICAL BASIS ENERGY PRODUCTION ENVIRONMENTAL ENVIRONMENTAL BENEFITS ENVIRONMENTAL CHANGES ENVIRONMENTAL COSTS ENVIRONMENTAL DEGRADATION ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACTS ENVIRONMENTAL PROBLEMS ENVIRONMENTAL REGULATION ENVIRONMENTAL REGULATIONS EXPECTED RETURNS EXPORTS EXTERNALITIES EXTERNALITY EXTREME EVENTS EXTREME POVERTY EXTREME WEATHER EXTREME WEATHER EVENTS FARM WORKERS FARMERS FISH FISHERIES FOOD PRICES FOOD SECURITY FOOD SELF-SUFFICIENCY FOSSIL FUELS FRESH WATER FUEL PRICES GDP GDP PER CAPITA GLOBAL POVERTY GROWTH CONTEXT GROWTH MODEL GROWTH POLICIES GROWTH PROCESS GROWTH PROSPECTS GROWTH RATES GROWTH THEORY HIGH GROWTH HIGH POVERTY HUMAN CAPITAL HUMAN CAPITAL INVESTMENT HUMAN DEVELOPMENT HUMAN HEALTH IMPACT ON POVERTY IMPACTS OF CLIMATE CHANGE INCOME INCOME GROWTH INCOME RISK INCOME SMOOTHING INCREASE GROWTH INCREASING RETURNS INCREASING RETURNS TO SCALE INEQUALITY INFORMAL INSURANCE INFORMAL INSURANCE MECHANISMS INFRASTRUCTURE INVESTMENT INSURANCE INSURANCE MARKET INTERGENERATIONAL EQUITY INTERNATIONAL TRADE JOBS LABOR PRODUCTIVITY LIQUIDITY LIVELIHOOD SECURITY LIVING CONDITIONS LIVING STANDARDS LONG RUN LOW-INCOME COUNTRIES LUMP SUM MACROECONOMIC POLICIES MARKET FAILURE MARKET FAILURES MICROECONOMIC ANALYSIS MIDDLE INCOME COUNTRIES MONETARY FUND NATURAL CAPITAL NATURAL RESOURCES NEGATIVE IMPACT OPPORTUNITY COST OPPORTUNITY COSTS OUTPUT GROWTH PERSISTENT POVERTY POLICY INSTRUMENTS POLICY RESEARCH POLITICAL ECONOMY POLLUTION POOR POOR COUNTRIES POOR HOUSEHOLDS POOR POPULATIONS POSITIVE EFFECTS POTENTIAL OUTPUT POVERTY ALLEVIATION POVERTY CHANGE POVERTY DYNAMICS POVERTY IMPACT POVERTY PERSISTENCE POVERTY REDUCTION POVERTY TRAPS POVERTY-REDUCING GROWTH PRICE TAG PRIVATE GOODS PRO-POOR PRO-POOR GROWTH PRODUCERS PRODUCTION PROCESSES PRODUCTIVE ASSETS PRODUCTIVITY GROWTH PROPERTY RIGHTS PUBLIC INVESTMENT PUBLIC SECTOR RAPID GROWTH REAL INCOME REMOTE AREAS RETURNS TO SCALE RICH COUNTRIES RISKS OF CLIMATE CHANGE RURAL RURAL AREAS RURAL LIVELIHOODS RURAL POVERTY RURAL SETTINGS SAFETY NETS SANITATION SAVINGS SECTOR ACTIVITIES SHADOW PRICES SKILLED LABOR SKILLED WORKERS SMALLHOLDER AGRICULTURE SOCIAL COSTS SOCIAL PROTECTION SOIL DEGRADATION SOIL EROSION SPATIAL PROCESSES STRUCTURAL CHANGE SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT TAXATION TECHNOLOGICAL PROGRESS URBAN AREAS URBAN POOR WATER POLLUTION WATER PRICES WATER PRICING WEALTH WELFARE ECONOMICS WELFARE EFFECTS WELFARE GAINS 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. 2014-06-30T16:32:00Z 2014-06-30T16:32:00Z 2014-06 http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2014/06/19705684/green-growth-good-poor http://hdl.handle.net/10986/18822 English en_US Policy Research Working Paper;No. 6936 CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/ World Bank, Washington, DC Publications & Research :: Policy Research Working Paper Publications & Research |