Mozambique - Beating the Odds: Sustaining Inclusion in a Growing Economy - A Mozambique Poverty, Gender, and Social Assessment, Volume 2. Appendixes

This assessment, reflecting poverty's many dimensions in Mozambique, combines multiple disciplines and diagnostic tools to explore poverty. It combines quantitative and qualitative approaches to understand trends in poverty and the dynamics th...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: World Bank
Format: Poverty Assessment
Language:English
Published: Washington, DC 2012
Subjects:
CC
TV
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2008/02/9242344/mozambique-beating-odds-sustaining-inclusion-growing-economy-mozambique-poverty-gender-social-assessment-vol-2-2-appendixes
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/8049
id okr-10986-8049
recordtype oai_dc
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
topic ACCESS TO SERVICES
AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTS
ANIMAL TRACTION
BASIC NEEDS
BORROWING
BREAST MILK
CASH CROPS
CASUAL WORKERS
CC
CHANGES IN POVERTY
COMMUNITIES
COMMUNITY LAND
CONSUMPTION PER CAPITA
CONSUMPTION QUINTILES
COOPERATIVES
COPING STRATEGY
CRIME
CROP INCOME
CROP PRODUCTION
CROP YIELDS
DEPENDENCY RATIO
DISABLED
DISEASES
DIVERSIFICATION
DIVORCE
DROPOUT
DROUGHT
EARLY MARRIAGE
EARNINGS
EDUCATION LEVEL
EDUCATION SYSTEM
ELDERLY
EMPLOYEE
EMPLOYER
EMPLOYERS
ENROLLMENT
EXCLUSION
EXPENDITURE
EXPENDITURES
FARM INCOME
FEMALE
FIREWOOD
FIXED CAPITAL
FOOD CROPS
FOOD POVERTY
FOOD PROCESSING
FOOD SHARE
FORMAL EDUCATION
GENDER
HEAD OF HOUSEHOLD
HEAD OF HOUSEHOLDS
HEALTH EXPENDITURE
HEALTH SERVICES
HOUSEHOLD ASSETS
HOUSEHOLD COMPOSITION
HOUSEHOLD CONSTRAINTS
HOUSEHOLD HEAD
HOUSEHOLD HEADS
HOUSEHOLD INCOME
HOUSEHOLD LEVEL
HOUSEHOLD PARTICIPATION
HOUSEHOLD POVERTY
HOUSEHOLD SIZE
HUMAN CAPITAL
HUMAN DEVELOPMENT
HUMAN DEVELOPMENT INDEX
ILLNESS
IMMUNIZATION
INCOME
INCOME CATEGORY
INCOME GROUP
INCOME QUINTILE
INCOME SHARES
INEQUALITY
INSURANCE
IRRIGATION
LABOR FORCE
LATRINE
LATRINES
LIVE BIRTHS
LIVESTOCK INCOME
LIVESTOCK SALES
MALARIA
MARITAL STATUS
MEASLES
MILK
MOSQUITO NET
MOSQUITO NETS
MOTHER
NATURAL DISASTERS
NUTRITIONAL STATUS
ORPHANS
PENSIONS
POOR
POPULATION DISTRIBUTION
POPULATION SHIFT
POVERTY DYNAMICS
POVERTY GAP
POVERTY INCIDENCE
POVERTY LEVEL
POVERTY LINE
POVERTY LINES
POVERTY MEASURES
POVERTY RATE
POVERTY RATES
POVERTY REDUCTION
POVERTY STATUS
PRENATAL CARE
PREVENTABLE DISEASES
PREVENTION METHODS
PRIMARY EDUCATION
PRIMARY SCHOOL
PROSTITUTION
PUBLIC INVESTMENT
RADIO
REMITTANCES
RURAL
RURAL AREAS
RURAL HOUSEHOLD
RURAL HOUSEHOLD INCOME
RURAL HOUSEHOLDS
RURAL INCOME
RURAL INCOME POVERTY
RURAL MIGRATION
RURAL POPULATION
RURAL POVERTY
RURAL POVERTY STATUS
RURAL URBAN POVERTY
RURAL WOMEN
SAFE WATER
SANITATION
SCHOOL ATTENDANCE
SCHOOLING
SECONDARY EDUCATION
SECONDARY SCHOOL
SELF-ASSESSMENT
SELF-EMPLOYMENT
SMALLHOLDER
SOCIAL GROUP
SOCIAL NETWORKS
SOURCES OF INCOME
SPOUSE
TEACHER RATIO
TECHNICAL TRAINING
TRADITIONAL HEALERS
TV
URBAN AREAS
URBAN WOMEN
VEGETABLES
VILLAGE
VULNERABILITY
VULNERABILITY ASSESSMENT
WAGE EMPLOYMENT
WATER USE
WELFARE INDICATORS
YOUNG GIRLS
YOUTH
spellingShingle ACCESS TO SERVICES
AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTS
ANIMAL TRACTION
BASIC NEEDS
BORROWING
BREAST MILK
CASH CROPS
CASUAL WORKERS
CC
CHANGES IN POVERTY
COMMUNITIES
COMMUNITY LAND
CONSUMPTION PER CAPITA
CONSUMPTION QUINTILES
COOPERATIVES
COPING STRATEGY
CRIME
CROP INCOME
CROP PRODUCTION
CROP YIELDS
DEPENDENCY RATIO
DISABLED
DISEASES
DIVERSIFICATION
DIVORCE
DROPOUT
DROUGHT
EARLY MARRIAGE
EARNINGS
EDUCATION LEVEL
EDUCATION SYSTEM
ELDERLY
EMPLOYEE
EMPLOYER
EMPLOYERS
ENROLLMENT
EXCLUSION
EXPENDITURE
EXPENDITURES
FARM INCOME
FEMALE
FIREWOOD
FIXED CAPITAL
FOOD CROPS
FOOD POVERTY
FOOD PROCESSING
FOOD SHARE
FORMAL EDUCATION
GENDER
HEAD OF HOUSEHOLD
HEAD OF HOUSEHOLDS
HEALTH EXPENDITURE
HEALTH SERVICES
HOUSEHOLD ASSETS
HOUSEHOLD COMPOSITION
HOUSEHOLD CONSTRAINTS
HOUSEHOLD HEAD
HOUSEHOLD HEADS
HOUSEHOLD INCOME
HOUSEHOLD LEVEL
HOUSEHOLD PARTICIPATION
HOUSEHOLD POVERTY
HOUSEHOLD SIZE
HUMAN CAPITAL
HUMAN DEVELOPMENT
HUMAN DEVELOPMENT INDEX
ILLNESS
IMMUNIZATION
INCOME
INCOME CATEGORY
INCOME GROUP
INCOME QUINTILE
INCOME SHARES
INEQUALITY
INSURANCE
IRRIGATION
LABOR FORCE
LATRINE
LATRINES
LIVE BIRTHS
LIVESTOCK INCOME
LIVESTOCK SALES
MALARIA
MARITAL STATUS
MEASLES
MILK
MOSQUITO NET
MOSQUITO NETS
MOTHER
NATURAL DISASTERS
NUTRITIONAL STATUS
ORPHANS
PENSIONS
POOR
POPULATION DISTRIBUTION
POPULATION SHIFT
POVERTY DYNAMICS
POVERTY GAP
POVERTY INCIDENCE
POVERTY LEVEL
POVERTY LINE
POVERTY LINES
POVERTY MEASURES
POVERTY RATE
POVERTY RATES
POVERTY REDUCTION
POVERTY STATUS
PRENATAL CARE
PREVENTABLE DISEASES
PREVENTION METHODS
PRIMARY EDUCATION
PRIMARY SCHOOL
PROSTITUTION
PUBLIC INVESTMENT
RADIO
REMITTANCES
RURAL
RURAL AREAS
RURAL HOUSEHOLD
RURAL HOUSEHOLD INCOME
RURAL HOUSEHOLDS
RURAL INCOME
RURAL INCOME POVERTY
RURAL MIGRATION
RURAL POPULATION
RURAL POVERTY
RURAL POVERTY STATUS
RURAL URBAN POVERTY
RURAL WOMEN
SAFE WATER
SANITATION
SCHOOL ATTENDANCE
SCHOOLING
SECONDARY EDUCATION
SECONDARY SCHOOL
SELF-ASSESSMENT
SELF-EMPLOYMENT
SMALLHOLDER
SOCIAL GROUP
SOCIAL NETWORKS
SOURCES OF INCOME
SPOUSE
TEACHER RATIO
TECHNICAL TRAINING
TRADITIONAL HEALERS
TV
URBAN AREAS
URBAN WOMEN
VEGETABLES
VILLAGE
VULNERABILITY
VULNERABILITY ASSESSMENT
WAGE EMPLOYMENT
WATER USE
WELFARE INDICATORS
YOUNG GIRLS
YOUTH
World Bank
Mozambique - Beating the Odds: Sustaining Inclusion in a Growing Economy - A Mozambique Poverty, Gender, and Social Assessment, Volume 2. Appendixes
geographic_facet Africa
Mozambique
description This assessment, reflecting poverty's many dimensions in Mozambique, combines multiple disciplines and diagnostic tools to explore poverty. It combines quantitative and qualitative approaches to understand trends in poverty and the dynamics that shape them. The objective is to support the development and implementation of proper policies that really work by taking poverty's multiple dimensions into account. The first analysis is using multiple quantitative and qualitative indicators on levels and changes in the opportunities and outcomes for households and communities in Mozambique since 1997. The main economic developments, analyzes how changes at the macro and meson level affected household livelihoods, and how households, especially poor households, responded. Agriculture and the private sector, especially labor-intensive activities, many of them small and informal. It can build human capital by improving access to basic public services, especially for the poor, and by increasing the value for money in public spending. And it can improve governance and accountability by getting government closer to its citizens. To achieve these goals, the government will need to increase the value for money in its spending on public services. It will also need to target services for the rural poor and enlist poor communities in identifying needs and delivering those services. And it will need to put in place good tracking systems to link program outputs to targets and outcomes, using frequent high-quality household surveys. Mozambique was an extremely poor country at the time of its elections in 1994, with decimated infrastructure, a weak economy, and fragile institutions. Since then, it has been astonishingly successful at restoring growth and improving welfare. Sustained growth -- driven primarily by investments in physical capital -- reduced monetary poverty from 69 percent of the populace in 1997 to 54 percent in 2003 and the depth and severity of no income poverty even more. Broad-based, labor-intensive private-sector growth was efficient in reducing poverty until 2003 because it was equally distributed. At the same time, investments in social and economic infrastructure extended access to public services, reduced welfare inequalities, and supported the livelihoods of the average Mozambican.
format Economic & Sector Work :: Poverty Assessment
author World Bank
author_facet World Bank
author_sort World Bank
title Mozambique - Beating the Odds: Sustaining Inclusion in a Growing Economy - A Mozambique Poverty, Gender, and Social Assessment, Volume 2. Appendixes
title_short Mozambique - Beating the Odds: Sustaining Inclusion in a Growing Economy - A Mozambique Poverty, Gender, and Social Assessment, Volume 2. Appendixes
title_full Mozambique - Beating the Odds: Sustaining Inclusion in a Growing Economy - A Mozambique Poverty, Gender, and Social Assessment, Volume 2. Appendixes
title_fullStr Mozambique - Beating the Odds: Sustaining Inclusion in a Growing Economy - A Mozambique Poverty, Gender, and Social Assessment, Volume 2. Appendixes
title_full_unstemmed Mozambique - Beating the Odds: Sustaining Inclusion in a Growing Economy - A Mozambique Poverty, Gender, and Social Assessment, Volume 2. Appendixes
title_sort mozambique - beating the odds: sustaining inclusion in a growing economy - a mozambique poverty, gender, and social assessment, volume 2. appendixes
publisher Washington, DC
publishDate 2012
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2008/02/9242344/mozambique-beating-odds-sustaining-inclusion-growing-economy-mozambique-poverty-gender-social-assessment-vol-2-2-appendixes
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/8049
_version_ 1764403343298396160
spelling okr-10986-80492021-04-23T14:02:36Z Mozambique - Beating the Odds: Sustaining Inclusion in a Growing Economy - A Mozambique Poverty, Gender, and Social Assessment, Volume 2. Appendixes World Bank ACCESS TO SERVICES AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTS ANIMAL TRACTION BASIC NEEDS BORROWING BREAST MILK CASH CROPS CASUAL WORKERS CC CHANGES IN POVERTY COMMUNITIES COMMUNITY LAND CONSUMPTION PER CAPITA CONSUMPTION QUINTILES COOPERATIVES COPING STRATEGY CRIME CROP INCOME CROP PRODUCTION CROP YIELDS DEPENDENCY RATIO DISABLED DISEASES DIVERSIFICATION DIVORCE DROPOUT DROUGHT EARLY MARRIAGE EARNINGS EDUCATION LEVEL EDUCATION SYSTEM ELDERLY EMPLOYEE EMPLOYER EMPLOYERS ENROLLMENT EXCLUSION EXPENDITURE EXPENDITURES FARM INCOME FEMALE FIREWOOD FIXED CAPITAL FOOD CROPS FOOD POVERTY FOOD PROCESSING FOOD SHARE FORMAL EDUCATION GENDER HEAD OF HOUSEHOLD HEAD OF HOUSEHOLDS HEALTH EXPENDITURE HEALTH SERVICES HOUSEHOLD ASSETS HOUSEHOLD COMPOSITION HOUSEHOLD CONSTRAINTS HOUSEHOLD HEAD HOUSEHOLD HEADS HOUSEHOLD INCOME HOUSEHOLD LEVEL HOUSEHOLD PARTICIPATION HOUSEHOLD POVERTY HOUSEHOLD SIZE HUMAN CAPITAL HUMAN DEVELOPMENT HUMAN DEVELOPMENT INDEX ILLNESS IMMUNIZATION INCOME INCOME CATEGORY INCOME GROUP INCOME QUINTILE INCOME SHARES INEQUALITY INSURANCE IRRIGATION LABOR FORCE LATRINE LATRINES LIVE BIRTHS LIVESTOCK INCOME LIVESTOCK SALES MALARIA MARITAL STATUS MEASLES MILK MOSQUITO NET MOSQUITO NETS MOTHER NATURAL DISASTERS NUTRITIONAL STATUS ORPHANS PENSIONS POOR POPULATION DISTRIBUTION POPULATION SHIFT POVERTY DYNAMICS POVERTY GAP POVERTY INCIDENCE POVERTY LEVEL POVERTY LINE POVERTY LINES POVERTY MEASURES POVERTY RATE POVERTY RATES POVERTY REDUCTION POVERTY STATUS PRENATAL CARE PREVENTABLE DISEASES PREVENTION METHODS PRIMARY EDUCATION PRIMARY SCHOOL PROSTITUTION PUBLIC INVESTMENT RADIO REMITTANCES RURAL RURAL AREAS RURAL HOUSEHOLD RURAL HOUSEHOLD INCOME RURAL HOUSEHOLDS RURAL INCOME RURAL INCOME POVERTY RURAL MIGRATION RURAL POPULATION RURAL POVERTY RURAL POVERTY STATUS RURAL URBAN POVERTY RURAL WOMEN SAFE WATER SANITATION SCHOOL ATTENDANCE SCHOOLING SECONDARY EDUCATION SECONDARY SCHOOL SELF-ASSESSMENT SELF-EMPLOYMENT SMALLHOLDER SOCIAL GROUP SOCIAL NETWORKS SOURCES OF INCOME SPOUSE TEACHER RATIO TECHNICAL TRAINING TRADITIONAL HEALERS TV URBAN AREAS URBAN WOMEN VEGETABLES VILLAGE VULNERABILITY VULNERABILITY ASSESSMENT WAGE EMPLOYMENT WATER USE WELFARE INDICATORS YOUNG GIRLS YOUTH This assessment, reflecting poverty's many dimensions in Mozambique, combines multiple disciplines and diagnostic tools to explore poverty. It combines quantitative and qualitative approaches to understand trends in poverty and the dynamics that shape them. The objective is to support the development and implementation of proper policies that really work by taking poverty's multiple dimensions into account. The first analysis is using multiple quantitative and qualitative indicators on levels and changes in the opportunities and outcomes for households and communities in Mozambique since 1997. The main economic developments, analyzes how changes at the macro and meson level affected household livelihoods, and how households, especially poor households, responded. Agriculture and the private sector, especially labor-intensive activities, many of them small and informal. It can build human capital by improving access to basic public services, especially for the poor, and by increasing the value for money in public spending. And it can improve governance and accountability by getting government closer to its citizens. To achieve these goals, the government will need to increase the value for money in its spending on public services. It will also need to target services for the rural poor and enlist poor communities in identifying needs and delivering those services. And it will need to put in place good tracking systems to link program outputs to targets and outcomes, using frequent high-quality household surveys. Mozambique was an extremely poor country at the time of its elections in 1994, with decimated infrastructure, a weak economy, and fragile institutions. Since then, it has been astonishingly successful at restoring growth and improving welfare. Sustained growth -- driven primarily by investments in physical capital -- reduced monetary poverty from 69 percent of the populace in 1997 to 54 percent in 2003 and the depth and severity of no income poverty even more. Broad-based, labor-intensive private-sector growth was efficient in reducing poverty until 2003 because it was equally distributed. At the same time, investments in social and economic infrastructure extended access to public services, reduced welfare inequalities, and supported the livelihoods of the average Mozambican. 2012-06-14T18:17:24Z 2012-06-14T18:17:24Z 2008-02 http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2008/02/9242344/mozambique-beating-odds-sustaining-inclusion-growing-economy-mozambique-poverty-gender-social-assessment-vol-2-2-appendixes http://hdl.handle.net/10986/8049 English CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/ World Bank Washington, DC Economic & Sector Work :: Poverty Assessment Economic & Sector Work Africa Mozambique