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The political economy of development
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 Introduction

 Income Poverty

Social Indicators:

  What the Poor Say

The Good Life and the Bad Life

What Makes the Good Life

Trends and Traps

Four Problems with the System:


What the Poor Say

Insecure Livelihood

Everyday there are more unemployed, every day one sees more men around the neighborhood. Argentina.

We go for additional manual work because the income from our cultivation and animal husbandry is not sufficient. Sri Lanka.

Young healthy guys are wandering around doing nothing all winter because they only have seasonal work. Kyrgyz Republic.

There is great insecurity now. You can’t make any plans. For all I know, tomorrow I might be told that we’ll be laid off for a couple of months or that the factory is to shut down. We work three days a week even now, and you’re in for a surprise every day. Bulgaria.

She is worried about the future of her children and the struggles they have to face when they grow up. Her immediate concern is to which house she should go for a loan of some food grains for their food that day. An interview with a poor woman, India.

 

The poor typically have few assets to make a living. Livelihood strategies are precarious and include a patchwork of low paying, dangerous, often backbreaking work for low returns. All over the world, even where poverty has decreased, such as in Vietnam and in Sri Lanka, the poor said that insecurity had increased. Excepting a few communities in Sri Lanka, India and the Kyrgyz Republic, the poor also said that economic opportunities had decreased. Most blamed governments for mismanaging the economy and for high taxes, inflation and privatization; declining agricultural productivity and declines in affordability of agricultural inputs; lack of cheap credit; corrupt government services; or simply lack of government care for the poor.

Livelihood strategies for the poor are primarily in the informal sector, and are sometimes illegal. People survive through an enormously wide range of activities — small-time vending, doing odd jobs, carrying brick and sand, working in quarries and mines, "shuttling" (the name given to constant movement while trading in Eastern Europe), borrowing from neighbors and moneylenders, working two or three jobs, growing vegetables on little plots, returning to subsistence agriculture in countries such as Bulgaria, Russia and the Kyrgyz Republic, collecting grass, herbs, and bamboo shoots, catching wild animals, selling cooked food, making crafts, working in factories, begging, washing blankets and carpets, putting children to work, praying for rain, selling assets one by one, surrendering to prayer, reducing the number of meals, changing their diet, selling their own blood, and in desperation engaging in criminal activities, including prostitution.

Everywhere, poor people equated poverty and insecurity with lack of assets, which results in their lacking the ability to cope with income fluctuations and shocks. Lack of access to credit from formal lenders was cited with astonishing frequency. In Vietnam the poor said they either did not qualify for loans or were turned down: "while the rich get loans, the poor get consideration of loans." In the absence of usable formal credit, people turn to friends and moneylenders. Moneylenders appeared frequently on the list of most important institutions in people’s lives, despite the fact that they charge high interest and insist on repayment. In Ethiopia, young men considered the moneylender their only hope for starting a business. In Sri Lanka, Indonesia, Vietnam, Bangladesh, India, and Egypt, the poor turn to moneylenders who give loans for consumption, who don’t have bothersome procedures and who allow payments to be made in kind, including in labor. Many poor people said that they stayed away from microcredit loans because of their collateral requirements, lengthy application processes and difficult payment terms, including in many cases the need to start repayments immediately.

With few assets, stressed family networks, problems in agriculture, and dismal job prospects, it is exceptionally difficult for the poor to be upwardly mobile. In the communities where the Consultations took place, the researchers documented case studies of individuals who had managed to become better off. A review of 147 of these upwardly mobile people revealed that self-employment or entrepreneurship was their most frequent path out of poverty. This was followed by income from wages and salaries, benefits from family, and income from agriculture and access to land. Acquisition of multiple assets helped people cope with the inevitable stresses and shocks of life. Approximately one third of the upwardly mobile people managed income flows from all these sources. Skills acquisition, learning to run a business, or learning particular skills were mentioned in 27% of the case studies. Education was mentioned by only 15% of the individuals interviewed with strong regional differences; between 20% and 30% in Latin America and countries of the former Soviet Union; and between 4% and 7% in Africa and Asia.

This relatively low contribution of education was echoed in poor people’s generally ambivalent attitude about education. In most countries, the poor value education as a potential route out of poverty. But sending a child to school can imply serious costs, both in terms of school fees, clothes, supplies and in the form of income loss. In several countries of the former Soviet Union the phenomenon of paying for education is new and, when combined with economic hardship, is having bad effects on children’s school attendance. Despite their belief in the potential value of education, the poor sometimes question its quality, language of instruction and relevance to employment.

* * * * *

What emerges from the collective voices of the poor in the Consultations is their remarkable resilience, hard work and grit. A young widow in India was perhaps typical, saying: "Even at times of acute crises, I held my nerves and did not give in to circumstances. My god has always stood with me."

Back to: Introduction, Trends in Poverty and Voices of the Poor