Hungary : Long-term Poverty, Social Protection, and the Labor Market, Volume 1. Main Report
This report documents the emergence of a
group of long-term poor in Hungary. While growth will
continue to be necessary to create well-paying jobs that
would enable people to escape poverty, the long term poor
are not likely to benefit from growth since they are
detached from the labor market, socially excluded, and in
many cases, facing discrimination which keeps them from
reintegrating into the labor market. The long-term poor in
Hungary are comprised of several distinct social groups: the
homeless, rural population particularly those living in
micro-communities, unemployed or withdrawn from the labor
market, households with more than three children, single
parent families, single elderly females, and the Roma. A
third of the long-term poor are of Roma ethnicity, even
though this group is only approximately 5 percent of the
Hungarian population. The analysis of the labor market
confirms the connection between long-term unemployment and
long-term poverty. One of the messages of this report is
that the Roma need good-paying jobs first and foremost. Many
Roma villages are characterized by a cycle of dependency on
state transfers. Reinsertion programs are needed to break
this cycle. In the medium term, emphasis on providing
high-quality general education to the Roma is needed. These
challenges for Hungary are complicated by decentralization,
which may lead to unequal treatment of the poor, with less
financing available where social programs are most needed.
Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: |
World Bank |
Language: | English en_US |
Published: |
Washington, DC
2001-04
|
Subjects: | ABSOLUTE POVERTY,
CHILD ALLOWANCES,
CHRONIC POVERTY,
CURRENCY UNIT,
DATA SET,
DEVELOPED COUNTRIES,
ECONOMIC ACTIVITY,
ECONOMIC GROWTH,
ECONOMIC MANAGEMENT,
ECONOMIES OF SCALE,
EDUCATIONAL ATTAINMENT,
EMPLOYMENT STATUS,
ESCAPE POVERTY,
EXPENDITURES,
EXTREME POVERTY,
FOOD BASKET,
HEADCOUNT INDEX,
HEALTH CARE,
HOUSEHOLD DATA,
HOUSEHOLD HEAD,
HOUSEHOLD INCOME,
INCOME INEQUALITY,
INCOME SUPPORT,
INDIVIDUAL INCOME,
INDIVIDUAL LEVEL,
INEQUALITY,
INFLATION,
INFORMAL SECTOR,
INFORMAL SECTORS,
INSURANCE,
INTERNATIONAL LABOUR,
LABOR FORCE,
LABOR FORCE SURVEY,
LABOR MARKET,
LABOR MARKET PROGRAMS,
LOCAL AUTHORITIES,
LONG TERM,
LONG-TERM UNEMPLOYMENT,
MINIMUM WAGE,
MULTIVARIATE ANALYSIS,
MULTIVARIATE REGRESSION,
MULTIVARIATE REGRESSION ANALYSIS,
OLD AGE,
PARTICIPATORY STUDY,
PENSION SYSTEM,
POLICY CONSIDERATIONS,
POLITICAL REPRESENTATION,
POOR,
POOR AREAS,
POOR HOUSEHOLDS,
POOR INDIVIDUALS,
POOR PEOPLE,
POVERTY ALLEVIATION,
POVERTY ANALYSIS,
POVERTY ASSESSMENT,
POVERTY GAP,
POVERTY GAP INDEX,
POVERTY IMPACT,
POVERTY LINE,
POVERTY LINES,
POVERTY MEASURES,
POVERTY PROFILE,
POVERTY PROFILES,
POVERTY REDUCTION,
POVERTY STATUS,
POVERTY TRENDS,
PRIVATE CONSUMPTION,
PROTECTION POLICIES,
PUBLIC HEALTH CARE,
PUBLIC POLICY,
PUBLIC SECTOR,
PUBLIC WORKS,
QUANTITATIVE DATA,
RELATIVE POVERTY,
RURAL AREAS,
RURAL HOUSEHOLDS,
RURAL POPULATION,
SAFETY NET,
SINGLE-PARENT HOUSEHOLDS,
SOCIAL ASSISTANCE,
SOCIAL ASSISTANCE PROGRAMS,
SOCIAL DEVELOPMENT,
SOCIAL EXCLUSION,
SOCIAL GROUPS,
SOCIAL POLICY,
SOCIAL PROGRAMS,
SOCIAL PROTECTION,
SOCIAL PROTECTION PROGRAMS,
STATISTICAL OFFICE,
TARGETING,
TRANSITION ECONOMIES,
UNEMPLOYMENT BENEFITS,
UNEMPLOYMENT RATES,
WAGES,
WELFARE MEASURE,
YOUNG PEOPLE POVERTY REDUCTION,
SOCIAL PROTECTION SYSTEMS,
UNEMPLOYMENT,
DECENTRALIZATION,
SINGLE PARENT FAMILIES,
DISABILITY BENEFITS,
UNEMPLOYMENT BENEFIT SYSTEMS, |
Online Access: | http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2001/04/1121197/hungary-long-term-poverty-social-protection-labor-market-vol-1-2-main-report
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/15524
|
Tags: |
Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
|