Where to Create Jobs to Reduce Poverty
Should public investment be targeted to big cities or to small towns, if the objective is to minimize national poverty? To answer this policy question, this paper extends the basic Todaro-type model of rural-urban migration to the case of migration from rural areas to two potential destinations, secondary town and big city. The analysis first derives the labor income, migration cost and poverty line conditions under which a poverty gradient from rural to town to city will exist as an equilibrium phenomenon. Then sufficient statistics are developed for the policy decisions based on these parameters. The empirical remit of the model is illustrated with long-running panel data from Kagera, Tanzania. Further, the paper shows that the structure of the sufficient statistics is maintained in the case where the model is generalized to introduce heterogeneous workers and jobs.
Main Authors: | , , |
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Format: | Working Paper biblioteca |
Language: | English en_US |
Published: |
World Bank, Washington, DC
2017-05
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Subjects: | BIG CITIES, TOWNS, POVERTY REDUCTION, POVERTY GRADIENT, TODARO MODEL, MIGRATION EQUILIBRIUM, INCOME DISTRIBUTION, |
Online Access: | http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/434811495466355613/Where-to-create-jobs-to-reduce-poverty-cities-or-towns https://hdl.handle.net/10986/26839 |
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Summary: | Should public investment be targeted to
big cities or to small towns, if the objective is to
minimize national poverty? To answer this policy question,
this paper extends the basic Todaro-type model of
rural-urban migration to the case of migration from rural
areas to two potential destinations, secondary town and big
city. The analysis first derives the labor income, migration
cost and poverty line conditions under which a poverty
gradient from rural to town to city will exist as an
equilibrium phenomenon. Then sufficient statistics are
developed for the policy decisions based on these
parameters. The empirical remit of the model is illustrated
with long-running panel data from Kagera, Tanzania. Further,
the paper shows that the structure of the sufficient
statistics is maintained in the case where the model is
generalized to introduce heterogeneous workers and jobs. |
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