On the Urbanization of Poverty

The author identifies conditions under which the urban sector's share of the poor population in a developing country will be a strictly increasing and strictly convex function of its share of the total population. Cross-sectional data afor 39 countries and time-series data for for India are consistent with the expected theoretical relationship. The empirical results imply that the poor urbanize faster than the population as a whole. But the experience across developing countries suggests that a majority of the poor will still live in rural areas long after most people in the developing world live in urban areas.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Ravallion, Martin
Language:English
en_US
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2001-04
Subjects:AVAILABLE DATA, CAPITAL ACCOUNT, COUNTRY DATA, DATA SET, DEVELOPING COUNTRIES, DEVELOPING WORLD, DEVELOPMENT ECONOMICS, DEVELOPMENT INDICATORS, DEVELOPMENT RESEARCH, ECONOMIC GROWTH, ECONOMIC REFORMS, ECONOMIC REVIEW, EMPIRICAL RESULTS, ERROR TERM, EXTERNAL TRADE, GROWTH RATE, HEALTH INSURANCE, HOUSEHOLD SURVEY, HOUSEHOLD SURVEYS, HUMAN CAPITAL, INCOME, INEQUALITY, LABOR MARKET, MARGINAL PRODUCT, NATIONAL POVERTY, POLICY INSTRUMENTS, POLICY RESEARCH, POLITICAL ECONOMY, POOR LIVING, POOR POPULATION, POPULATION SHARE, POVERTY LINES, POVERTY POLICY, POVERTY PROFILE, POVERTY RATE, POVERTY RATES, POVERTY REDUCTION, PUBLIC HEALTH, RELATIVE WAGE, RURAL AREAS, RURAL POVERTY, SECTORAL COMPOSITION, SETTLEMENT SYSTEMS, SPILLOVERS, STRUCTURAL ADJUSTMENT, TRADE POLICY, UNEMPLOYMENT, URBAN, URBAN AREAS, URBAN ECONOMY, URBAN LABOR, URBAN MIGRATION, URBAN POPULATION, URBAN POVERTY, URBAN SECTOR, URBANIZATION, URBANIZATION OF POVERTY,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2001/04/1121144/urbanization-poverty
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/19681
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