Briefing paper
Pathways to sustained poverty reduction: balancing growth from above and below
Publisher
Low and middle income countries
Economic indicators
Sustainable development
Poverty
Foreign aid
Resources
| Attachment | Size |
|---|---|
| Pathways to sustained poverty reduction: balancing growth from above and below | 220.96 KB |
Description
This briefing note summarises the findings of the Chronic Poverty Advisory Network's (CPAN) forthcoming Chronic Poverty Report on Growth (Shepherd et al., 2019).
Studying the movement of households into and out of extreme poverty in 11 countries in sub-Saharan Africa and South and Southeast Asia reveals important nuances to the mainstream growth and poverty reduction narrative.
Key points:
- Most people escape extreme poverty through ‘growth from below’ (GfB) – that is, through small investments by households in micro-enterprises, smallholder agriculture, the rural non-farm economy, and through the urban informal sector.
- Fewer people escape through ‘growth from above’ (GfA) – which results from larger, more formal investments, for example in labour-intensive manufacturing. Those who do accomplish this through GfA work mainly in industries such as garment manufacturing, where employment is accessible to poor, often migrant women and men.
- Governments and their development partners largely support GfA, though there are some governments and donors that do much better in supporting GfB.
- Social and economic policy measures to tighten labour markets assist both GfA and GfB to reduce poverty, but more strategic efforts and attention are needed to balance GfA and GfB to facilitate sustained escapes from poverty.
Publication Details
Copyright:
Overseas Development Institute 2019
License type:
CC BY-NC-ND
Access Rights Type:
open
Post date:
9 Jul 2019
