Multidimensional Poverty in Ethiopia

This paper presents trends in monetary and nonmonetary dimensions of wellbeing in Ethiopia using data from the Household Consumption and Expenditure and Welfare Monitoring surveys implemented in 2000, 2005, and 2011. The paper provides evidence on changes in overlapping deprivations using a non-index approach to multidimensional poverty. It assesses the performance of various dimensions in education, health, and living standards, taking one indicator at a time. It then examines the overlap between different dimensions of poverty and examines how this has changed over time in Ethiopia and across rural and urban areas. It highlights that although Ethiopia’s multidimensional poverty index is very high, there have been improvements in overlapping deprivations and, as a result, the number of individuals deprived in multiple dimensions has fallen.

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Ambel, Alemayehu, Mehta, Parendi, Yigezu, Biratu
Format: Working Paper biblioteca
Language:English
en_US
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2015-09
Subjects:SANITATION, LIVING STANDARDS, EDUCATION FOR GIRLS, POVERTY LINE, SKILLED HEALTH PERSONNEL, PEOPLE, SAFE DRINKING WATER, ANTENATAL CARE, URBAN POVERTY, SCHOOLING, RURAL WOMEN, CULTURAL PRACTICES, MORBIDITY, GIRL CHILD, DEVELOPING COUNTRIES, LEVEL OF POVERTY, HEALTH CARE, SCHOOL HEALTH, CHILD MORBIDITY, HEALTH, POLICY DISCUSSIONS, FEWER HOUSEHOLDS, RURAL POPULATION, MEASURES, HEALTH FACILITIES, HOSPITAL, REGION, ACCESS TO EDUCATION, POVERTY REDUCTION, TELEVISION, CLEAN DRINKING WATER, POVERTY INDICATOR, DIETS, RURAL POPULATIONS, MINISTRY OF HEALTH, RURAL HOUSEHOLDS, IMMUNIZATION, ANTENATAL VISITS, ACCESS TO SAFE DRINKING WATER, HEALTH CENTERS, VIOLENCE, ACCESS TO HEALTH SERVICES, NUMBER OF HOUSEHOLDS, CONSUMPTION EXPENDITURE, FEMALE CHILDREN, DIMENSIONAL POVERTY, PRIMARY SCHOOL, GENITAL MUTILATION, CHANGES IN POVERTY, DIMENSIONS OF POVERTY, MORTALITY, RADIO, ENROLMENT RATES, ACCESS TO INFORMATION, PROGRESS, HOUSEHOLD LEVEL, INFANT MORTALITY, CONSUMPTION, POVERTY DATA, INFANT, DOMESTIC VIOLENCE, WORKERS, POLICIES, POVERTY INDEX, AGED, CASH EARNINGS, MODERN CONTRACEPTIVE USE, REDUCTION IN POVERTY, SCHOOL ATTENDANCE, POLICY RESEARCH WORKING PAPER, HEALTH OUTCOMES, SELF-ESTEEM, HYGIENE, RURAL POVERTY, URBAN AREAS, CROP LAND, RURAL, MEASUREMENT, NUTRITION, POPULATIONS, FEMALE GENITAL MUTILATION, POLICY, SOCIAL WELFARE, CONTRACEPTIVE USE, CHILD MORTALITY, ECONOMIC INEQUALITY, NUMBER OF WOMEN, WATER SOURCES, BABIES, ACCESS TO ELECTRICITY, GOVERNMENT POLICIES, POVERTY INDICATORS, HUMAN DEVELOPMENT INDEX, CHILDREN, REGIONS, FEMALE CIRCUMCISION, PHYSICAL HEALTH, DRINKING WATER, VIOLENCE AGAINST WOMEN, RURAL AREAS, POVERTY, BIRTH ATTENDANTS, CLEAN WATER, TRADITIONAL BIRTH ATTENDANTS, HOUSEHOLD CONSUMPTION, POPULATION, REMOTE LOCATIONS, URBAN WOMEN, REMOTE PLACES, POLICY RESEARCH, POVERTY RATE, ACCESS TO SANITATION, POOR, WELFARE MONITORING, POVERTY ASSESSMENT, PRIMARY EDUCATION, FAMILIES, WOMEN, CIRCUMCISION, HEALTH SERVICES, INVESTMENTS IN EDUCATION, PREGNANCY, POVERTY ANALYSIS, GENDER EQUALITY, DEVELOPMENT POLICY, HUMAN DEVELOPMENT, INEQUALITY, SANITATION FACILITIES, POOR HOUSEHOLDS,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2015/09/25076815/multidimensional-poverty-ethiopia-changes-overlapping-deprivations
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/22839
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Description
Summary:This paper presents trends in monetary and nonmonetary dimensions of wellbeing in Ethiopia using data from the Household Consumption and Expenditure and Welfare Monitoring surveys implemented in 2000, 2005, and 2011. The paper provides evidence on changes in overlapping deprivations using a non-index approach to multidimensional poverty. It assesses the performance of various dimensions in education, health, and living standards, taking one indicator at a time. It then examines the overlap between different dimensions of poverty and examines how this has changed over time in Ethiopia and across rural and urban areas. It highlights that although Ethiopia’s multidimensional poverty index is very high, there have been improvements in overlapping deprivations and, as a result, the number of individuals deprived in multiple dimensions has fallen.