Turkey : Poverty and Coping After Crises, Volume 1. Main Report

Turkey experienced severe losses of life and infrastructure in 1999 caused by the August earthquake. The earthquake was followed by a period of economic and financial crisis, culminating in a major currency devaluation in February 2001. What has been the social impact of these crises? In order to answer that question, the World Bank and the Government of Japan co-financed a household survey during the summer of 2001, which consisted of surveying 4200 households on their consumption and income, and interviewing 120 respondents in depth for case studies. This study seeks to answer three main questions: how many are poor in Turkey in 2001; who are the poor and why are they poor?; and how do the poor cope with risk and poverty?. The major effect of the crises has been an increase in poverty in urban areas of Turkey from 1994 to 2001. Extreme poverty in all of Turkey has not changed, and remains at low levels, but inequality is also unchanged at quite high levels. A relatively large share (nearly one-fifth) of the urban population has consumption below a food standard, and qualitative evidence indicates that poverty has worsened in rural areas as well. The report concludes with the following policy recommendations:1) Macroeconomic management to resume broad-based growth, which should reverse the poverty trend since the vast majority of the newly poor are not extremely poor 2) Counter negative coping strategies of the poor by providing conditional cash transfers 3) Expand job opportunities for the newly poor through micro-projects and community development 4) Improve targeting and coverage of the extreme poor and outreach to them through institutional strengthening 5) Institute regular poverty monitoring through household surveys and the development of a poverty map.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: World Bank
Format: Poverty Assessment biblioteca
Language:English
en_US
Published: Washington, DC 2003-07-28
Subjects:ABSOLUTE POVERTY, AVERAGE POVERTY, BENEFICIARY ASSESSMENT, CASE STUDIES, CASH TRANSFERS, CERTAIN EXTENT, CHILD LABOR, CONFLICT, CONSUMPTION MODULE, CONSUMPTION POVERTY, COUNTERFACTUAL, CPI, DEMOGRAPHICS, DISINFLATION, DROUGHT, ECONOMIC CONSEQUENCES, ECONOMIC IMPACT, EMPLOYMENT, EXCHANGE RATE, EXPENDITURE SURVEY, EXPENDITURES, EXTERNAL SHOCKS, EXTREME POVERTY, FINANCIAL RESOURCES, FOOD BASKET, FOOD CONSUMPTION, FOOD POVERTY LINE, GNP, HOUSEHOLD CONSUMPTION, HOUSEHOLD INCOME, HOUSEHOLD SIZE, HOUSEHOLD SURVEY, HOUSEHOLD SURVEYS, HOUSEHOLD WELFARE, HUMAN CAPITAL, HUMAN DEVELOPMENT, IDIOSYNCRATIC SHOCKS, IMPACT ASSESSMENT, INCOME, INCOME INEQUALITY, INCOME INFORMATION, INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT, INSTITUTIONAL DEVELOPMENT, INSURANCE, INTEREST RATES, LIVING STANDARDS, MACROECONOMIC FRAMEWORK, MACROECONOMIC MANAGEMENT, MACROECONOMIC SHOCKS, NATIONAL AVERAGE, PER CAPITA CONSUMPTION, POLICY MAKERS, POOR, POOR CHILDREN, POVERTY LINE, POVERTY LINES, POVERTY MAP, POVERTY MONITORING, QUALITATIVE INFORMATION, REAL TERMS, REAL WAGES, RECIPROCITY, RURAL AREAS, RURAL HOUSEHOLDS, RURAL POVERTY, SAFETY NET, SAMPLING FRAME, SERVICE SECTOR, SOCIAL ASSISTANCE, SOCIAL CAPITAL, SOCIAL PROTECTION, SOCIAL SERVICES, STRUCTURAL REFORMS, TARGETING, TEAM MEMBERS, TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE, UNEMPLOYMENT, UNEMPLOYMENT RATES, URBAN AREAS, URBAN HOUSEHOLDS, URBAN POPULATION, WAGES MACROECONOMIC ANALYSIS, POVERTY ASSESSMENTS, FOOD SECURITY, DISASTER RECOVERY, VULNERABILITY, INEQUITY, RISK MANAGEMENT, COPING MECHANISMS, COPING STRATEGIES, NATURAL DISASTERS, IN-KIND TRANSFERS, CASH CONTRIBUTIONS, CASH SOCIAL TRANSFERS, CASH TRANSFER, FAMILY ASSISTANCE, HOUSEHOLD EXPENDITURE SURVEYS, HOUSEHOLD EXPENDITURES FOR EDUCATION, EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES, MICRO-PROJECTS, COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT, INSTITUTIONAL CAPACITY, SOCIAL IMPACT ASSESSMENT, COMMUNITY INFRASTRUCTURE, COMMUNITY LIFE, PUBLIC HEALTH, ACCESS TO EDUCATION, GIRLS EDUCATION,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2003/07/2486928/turkey-poverty-coping-after-crises-vol-1-2-main-report
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/14624
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