Living income benchmarking of rural households in low-income countries

The extreme poverty line is the most commonly used benchmark for poverty, set at US$ 1.90 by the World Bank. Another benchmark, based on the Anker living wage methodology, is the remuneration received for a standard work week necessary for a worker to meet his/her family’s basic needs in a particular place. The living wage concept has been used extensively to address incomes of plantation workers producing agricultural commodities for international markets. More recently intense discussion has emerged concerning the ‘living income’ of smallholder farmers who produce commodities for international supply chains on their own land. In this article we propose a simple method that can be used in all types of development projects to benchmark a rural ‘living income’. We launch the Living Income Methodology, as adapted from the Living Wage Methodology, to estimate the living income for rural households. In any given location this requires about one week of fieldwork. We express it per adult equivalent per day (AE/day) and data collection is focused on rural households and their immediate surroundings. Our three case studies showed that in 2017 in Lushoto District, rural Tanzania, the living income was US$ PPP 4.04/AE/day, in Isingiro District, rural Uganda, 3.82 and in Sidama Zone, rural Ethiopia, 3.60. In all cases, the extreme poverty line of US$ PPP 1.90 per capita per day is insufficient to meet the basic human rights for a decent living in low-income countries. The Living Income Methodology provides a transparent local benchmark that can be used to assess development opportunities of rural households, by employers in rural areas, including farmers hiring in labour, while respecting basic human rights on a decent living. It can be used to reflect on progress of rural households in low-income countries on their aspired path out of poverty. It further provides a meaningful benchmark to measure progress on Sustainable Development Goal 1, eliminating poverty, and 2, zero hunger and sustainable food systems, allowing for consideration of the local context.

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Main Authors: Ven, G.W. van de, Valença, A. de, Marinus, W., Jager, I. de, Descheemaeker, K.K., Hekman, W., Mellisse, B.T., Baijukya, Frederick P., Omari, M., Giller, Ken E.
Format: Journal Article biblioteca
Language:English
Published: Springer 2021-06
Subjects:rural communities, income generation, poverty, sustainable agriculture, sustainable development, livelihoods, east africa, development, food science,
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/110379
https://doi.org/10.1007/s12571-020-01099-8
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spelling dig-cgspace-10568-1103792023-12-08T19:36:04Z Living income benchmarking of rural households in low-income countries Ven, G.W. van de Valença, A. de Marinus, W. Jager, I. de Descheemaeker, K.K. Hekman, W. Mellisse, B.T. Baijukya, Frederick P. Omari, M. Giller, Ken E. rural communities income generation poverty sustainable agriculture sustainable development livelihoods east africa development food science The extreme poverty line is the most commonly used benchmark for poverty, set at US$ 1.90 by the World Bank. Another benchmark, based on the Anker living wage methodology, is the remuneration received for a standard work week necessary for a worker to meet his/her family’s basic needs in a particular place. The living wage concept has been used extensively to address incomes of plantation workers producing agricultural commodities for international markets. More recently intense discussion has emerged concerning the ‘living income’ of smallholder farmers who produce commodities for international supply chains on their own land. In this article we propose a simple method that can be used in all types of development projects to benchmark a rural ‘living income’. We launch the Living Income Methodology, as adapted from the Living Wage Methodology, to estimate the living income for rural households. In any given location this requires about one week of fieldwork. We express it per adult equivalent per day (AE/day) and data collection is focused on rural households and their immediate surroundings. Our three case studies showed that in 2017 in Lushoto District, rural Tanzania, the living income was US$ PPP 4.04/AE/day, in Isingiro District, rural Uganda, 3.82 and in Sidama Zone, rural Ethiopia, 3.60. In all cases, the extreme poverty line of US$ PPP 1.90 per capita per day is insufficient to meet the basic human rights for a decent living in low-income countries. The Living Income Methodology provides a transparent local benchmark that can be used to assess development opportunities of rural households, by employers in rural areas, including farmers hiring in labour, while respecting basic human rights on a decent living. It can be used to reflect on progress of rural households in low-income countries on their aspired path out of poverty. It further provides a meaningful benchmark to measure progress on Sustainable Development Goal 1, eliminating poverty, and 2, zero hunger and sustainable food systems, allowing for consideration of the local context. 2021-06 2020-12-03T11:42:28Z 2020-12-03T11:42:28Z Journal Article van de Ven, G.W., de Valença, A., Marinus, W., de Jager, I., Descheemaeker, K.K., Hekman, W., ... & Giller, K. (2020). Living income benchmarking of rural households in low-income countries. Food Security, 1-21. 1876-4517 https://hdl.handle.net/10568/110379 https://doi.org/10.1007/s12571-020-01099-8 NATURAL RESOURCE MANAGEMENT en CC-BY-4.0 Open Access p. 729-749 application/pdf Springer Food Security
institution CGIAR
collection DSpace
country Francia
countrycode FR
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-cgspace
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Oeste
libraryname Biblioteca del CGIAR
language English
topic rural communities
income generation
poverty
sustainable agriculture
sustainable development
livelihoods
east africa
development
food science
rural communities
income generation
poverty
sustainable agriculture
sustainable development
livelihoods
east africa
development
food science
spellingShingle rural communities
income generation
poverty
sustainable agriculture
sustainable development
livelihoods
east africa
development
food science
rural communities
income generation
poverty
sustainable agriculture
sustainable development
livelihoods
east africa
development
food science
Ven, G.W. van de
Valença, A. de
Marinus, W.
Jager, I. de
Descheemaeker, K.K.
Hekman, W.
Mellisse, B.T.
Baijukya, Frederick P.
Omari, M.
Giller, Ken E.
Living income benchmarking of rural households in low-income countries
description The extreme poverty line is the most commonly used benchmark for poverty, set at US$ 1.90 by the World Bank. Another benchmark, based on the Anker living wage methodology, is the remuneration received for a standard work week necessary for a worker to meet his/her family’s basic needs in a particular place. The living wage concept has been used extensively to address incomes of plantation workers producing agricultural commodities for international markets. More recently intense discussion has emerged concerning the ‘living income’ of smallholder farmers who produce commodities for international supply chains on their own land. In this article we propose a simple method that can be used in all types of development projects to benchmark a rural ‘living income’. We launch the Living Income Methodology, as adapted from the Living Wage Methodology, to estimate the living income for rural households. In any given location this requires about one week of fieldwork. We express it per adult equivalent per day (AE/day) and data collection is focused on rural households and their immediate surroundings. Our three case studies showed that in 2017 in Lushoto District, rural Tanzania, the living income was US$ PPP 4.04/AE/day, in Isingiro District, rural Uganda, 3.82 and in Sidama Zone, rural Ethiopia, 3.60. In all cases, the extreme poverty line of US$ PPP 1.90 per capita per day is insufficient to meet the basic human rights for a decent living in low-income countries. The Living Income Methodology provides a transparent local benchmark that can be used to assess development opportunities of rural households, by employers in rural areas, including farmers hiring in labour, while respecting basic human rights on a decent living. It can be used to reflect on progress of rural households in low-income countries on their aspired path out of poverty. It further provides a meaningful benchmark to measure progress on Sustainable Development Goal 1, eliminating poverty, and 2, zero hunger and sustainable food systems, allowing for consideration of the local context.
format Journal Article
topic_facet rural communities
income generation
poverty
sustainable agriculture
sustainable development
livelihoods
east africa
development
food science
author Ven, G.W. van de
Valença, A. de
Marinus, W.
Jager, I. de
Descheemaeker, K.K.
Hekman, W.
Mellisse, B.T.
Baijukya, Frederick P.
Omari, M.
Giller, Ken E.
author_facet Ven, G.W. van de
Valença, A. de
Marinus, W.
Jager, I. de
Descheemaeker, K.K.
Hekman, W.
Mellisse, B.T.
Baijukya, Frederick P.
Omari, M.
Giller, Ken E.
author_sort Ven, G.W. van de
title Living income benchmarking of rural households in low-income countries
title_short Living income benchmarking of rural households in low-income countries
title_full Living income benchmarking of rural households in low-income countries
title_fullStr Living income benchmarking of rural households in low-income countries
title_full_unstemmed Living income benchmarking of rural households in low-income countries
title_sort living income benchmarking of rural households in low-income countries
publisher Springer
publishDate 2021-06
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/110379
https://doi.org/10.1007/s12571-020-01099-8
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