Poverty in Ecuador
The note looks at poverty in Ecuador, assessing macroeconomic developments through its policies to maintain stability with fiscal discipline, and increase economic productivity and competitiveness, in particular, the 1998/99 crisis, the 2000 dollar...
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Format: | Brief |
Language: | English |
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World Bank, Washington, DC
2012
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Online Access: | http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2005/05/6405185/poverty-ecuador http://hdl.handle.net/10986/10333 |
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okr-10986-103332021-04-23T14:02:50Z Poverty in Ecuador Sanchez-Paramo, Carolina ACCOUNTABILITY AGRICULTURAL OUTPUT AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTIVITY AGRICULTURAL RESEARCH AGRICULTURE ASSETS AVERAGE CONSUMPTION CAPITAL FLOWS CHRONIC MALNUTRITION COLLATERAL COMPETITIVENESS DURABLE GOODS ECONOMIC BARRIERS ECONOMIC EFFICIENCY ECONOMIC MANAGEMENT ECONOMIC POLICIES EXTERNAL SHOCKS FARM PRODUCTIVITY FARM WORKERS FISCAL DEFICITS FISCAL POLICIES FREE TRADE GDP PER CAPITA HEALTH EXPENDITURES HEALTH SERVICE HOUSEHOLD LEVEL INCOME INCOME GENERATION INEFFICIENCY INFLATION INSTITUTIONAL ENVIRONMENT INSTITUTIONAL FRAMEWORK LABOR FORCE LABOR FORCE PARTICIPATION LABOR MARKET LACK OF CREDIT LAND DISTRIBUTION LAND REGISTRIES LAND TITLING LAND TRANSACTIONS LEGISLATION MACROECONOMIC CRISIS MIGRATION PER CAPITA CONSUMPTION POOR POOR BENEFIT POOR HOUSEHOLDS POOR INFRASTRUCTURE POOR PEOPLE POVERTY GROUP POVERTY RATES POVERTY TRENDS PRICE STABILIZATION PRODUCTION FUNCTION PRODUCTIVITY GROWTH PRODUCTIVITY INCREASES PROPERTY RIGHTS REAL GDP RURAL RURAL AREAS RURAL CREDIT RURAL FARM RURAL HOUSEHOLDS RURAL INCOME RURAL POOR RURAL POVERTY SALES TAXES SAVINGS SERVICE PROVISION SOCIAL ASSISTANCE SOCIAL EXPENDITURES SOCIAL PROGRAMS SOCIAL SECTORS SOCIAL SERVICES SOCIAL SPENDING TARGETING TARIFF BARRIERS TAX REVENUES TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE TOTAL FACTOR PRODUCTIVITY TRANSACTION COSTS UNEMPLOYMENT UNEMPLOYMENT RATE URBAN AREAS URBAN HOUSEHOLDS URBAN POVERTY URBANIZATION WAGE INCOME WAGES The note looks at poverty in Ecuador, assessing macroeconomic developments through its policies to maintain stability with fiscal discipline, and increase economic productivity and competitiveness, in particular, the 1998/99 crisis, the 2000 dollarization and their effect on poverty. From 1990 to 2001, national consumption-based poverty rose from 40 to 45 percent, and the number of poor people increased from 3.5 to 5.2 million. Poverty increased by over 80 percent in urban areas at the Costa and the Sierra, was stable in the rural Costa, and rose 15 percent in the rural Sierra. Poverty rates continued to be highest in rural areas, but rapid urbanization increased the number of poor people living in urban areas. Employment is the main income source, frequently the only one, for most urban families. Thus policies that generate employment and wage income are crucial for reducing urban poverty. The 1998/99 crisis sent employment and real labor income plummeting, urban poverty rose, and poor urban households resorted to various coping strategies, such as increased labor force participation, and migration. Poverty declined slowly after 2000, reflecting just a weak formal employment creation. It is stipulated social expenditures could be used more effectively, for significant improvements are needed in education provision, and quality, especially in rural areas, while health service coverage must be expanded and integrated better across different subsystems, and providers. 2012-08-13T11:11:31Z 2012-08-13T11:11:31Z 2005-05 http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2005/05/6405185/poverty-ecuador http://hdl.handle.net/10986/10333 English en breve; No. 71 CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/ World Bank World Bank, Washington, DC Publications & Research :: Brief Publications & Research Latin America & Caribbean Ecuador |
repository_type |
Digital Repository |
institution_category |
Foreign Institution |
institution |
Digital Repositories |
building |
World Bank Open Knowledge Repository |
collection |
World Bank |
language |
English |
topic |
ACCOUNTABILITY AGRICULTURAL OUTPUT AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTIVITY AGRICULTURAL RESEARCH AGRICULTURE ASSETS AVERAGE CONSUMPTION CAPITAL FLOWS CHRONIC MALNUTRITION COLLATERAL COMPETITIVENESS DURABLE GOODS ECONOMIC BARRIERS ECONOMIC EFFICIENCY ECONOMIC MANAGEMENT ECONOMIC POLICIES EXTERNAL SHOCKS FARM PRODUCTIVITY FARM WORKERS FISCAL DEFICITS FISCAL POLICIES FREE TRADE GDP PER CAPITA HEALTH EXPENDITURES HEALTH SERVICE HOUSEHOLD LEVEL INCOME INCOME GENERATION INEFFICIENCY INFLATION INSTITUTIONAL ENVIRONMENT INSTITUTIONAL FRAMEWORK LABOR FORCE LABOR FORCE PARTICIPATION LABOR MARKET LACK OF CREDIT LAND DISTRIBUTION LAND REGISTRIES LAND TITLING LAND TRANSACTIONS LEGISLATION MACROECONOMIC CRISIS MIGRATION PER CAPITA CONSUMPTION POOR POOR BENEFIT POOR HOUSEHOLDS POOR INFRASTRUCTURE POOR PEOPLE POVERTY GROUP POVERTY RATES POVERTY TRENDS PRICE STABILIZATION PRODUCTION FUNCTION PRODUCTIVITY GROWTH PRODUCTIVITY INCREASES PROPERTY RIGHTS REAL GDP RURAL RURAL AREAS RURAL CREDIT RURAL FARM RURAL HOUSEHOLDS RURAL INCOME RURAL POOR RURAL POVERTY SALES TAXES SAVINGS SERVICE PROVISION SOCIAL ASSISTANCE SOCIAL EXPENDITURES SOCIAL PROGRAMS SOCIAL SECTORS SOCIAL SERVICES SOCIAL SPENDING TARGETING TARIFF BARRIERS TAX REVENUES TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE TOTAL FACTOR PRODUCTIVITY TRANSACTION COSTS UNEMPLOYMENT UNEMPLOYMENT RATE URBAN AREAS URBAN HOUSEHOLDS URBAN POVERTY URBANIZATION WAGE INCOME WAGES |
spellingShingle |
ACCOUNTABILITY AGRICULTURAL OUTPUT AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTIVITY AGRICULTURAL RESEARCH AGRICULTURE ASSETS AVERAGE CONSUMPTION CAPITAL FLOWS CHRONIC MALNUTRITION COLLATERAL COMPETITIVENESS DURABLE GOODS ECONOMIC BARRIERS ECONOMIC EFFICIENCY ECONOMIC MANAGEMENT ECONOMIC POLICIES EXTERNAL SHOCKS FARM PRODUCTIVITY FARM WORKERS FISCAL DEFICITS FISCAL POLICIES FREE TRADE GDP PER CAPITA HEALTH EXPENDITURES HEALTH SERVICE HOUSEHOLD LEVEL INCOME INCOME GENERATION INEFFICIENCY INFLATION INSTITUTIONAL ENVIRONMENT INSTITUTIONAL FRAMEWORK LABOR FORCE LABOR FORCE PARTICIPATION LABOR MARKET LACK OF CREDIT LAND DISTRIBUTION LAND REGISTRIES LAND TITLING LAND TRANSACTIONS LEGISLATION MACROECONOMIC CRISIS MIGRATION PER CAPITA CONSUMPTION POOR POOR BENEFIT POOR HOUSEHOLDS POOR INFRASTRUCTURE POOR PEOPLE POVERTY GROUP POVERTY RATES POVERTY TRENDS PRICE STABILIZATION PRODUCTION FUNCTION PRODUCTIVITY GROWTH PRODUCTIVITY INCREASES PROPERTY RIGHTS REAL GDP RURAL RURAL AREAS RURAL CREDIT RURAL FARM RURAL HOUSEHOLDS RURAL INCOME RURAL POOR RURAL POVERTY SALES TAXES SAVINGS SERVICE PROVISION SOCIAL ASSISTANCE SOCIAL EXPENDITURES SOCIAL PROGRAMS SOCIAL SECTORS SOCIAL SERVICES SOCIAL SPENDING TARGETING TARIFF BARRIERS TAX REVENUES TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE TOTAL FACTOR PRODUCTIVITY TRANSACTION COSTS UNEMPLOYMENT UNEMPLOYMENT RATE URBAN AREAS URBAN HOUSEHOLDS URBAN POVERTY URBANIZATION WAGE INCOME WAGES Sanchez-Paramo, Carolina Poverty in Ecuador |
geographic_facet |
Latin America & Caribbean Ecuador |
relation |
en breve; No. 71 |
description |
The note looks at poverty in Ecuador,
assessing macroeconomic developments through its policies to
maintain stability with fiscal discipline, and increase
economic productivity and competitiveness, in particular,
the 1998/99 crisis, the 2000 dollarization and their effect
on poverty. From 1990 to 2001, national consumption-based
poverty rose from 40 to 45 percent, and the number of poor
people increased from 3.5 to 5.2 million. Poverty increased
by over 80 percent in urban areas at the Costa and the
Sierra, was stable in the rural Costa, and rose 15 percent
in the rural Sierra. Poverty rates continued to be highest
in rural areas, but rapid urbanization increased the number
of poor people living in urban areas. Employment is the main
income source, frequently the only one, for most urban
families. Thus policies that generate employment and wage
income are crucial for reducing urban poverty. The 1998/99
crisis sent employment and real labor income plummeting,
urban poverty rose, and poor urban households resorted to
various coping strategies, such as increased labor force
participation, and migration. Poverty declined slowly after
2000, reflecting just a weak formal employment creation. It
is stipulated social expenditures could be used more
effectively, for significant improvements are needed in
education provision, and quality, especially in rural areas,
while health service coverage must be expanded and
integrated better across different subsystems, and providers. |
format |
Publications & Research :: Brief |
author |
Sanchez-Paramo, Carolina |
author_facet |
Sanchez-Paramo, Carolina |
author_sort |
Sanchez-Paramo, Carolina |
title |
Poverty in Ecuador |
title_short |
Poverty in Ecuador |
title_full |
Poverty in Ecuador |
title_fullStr |
Poverty in Ecuador |
title_full_unstemmed |
Poverty in Ecuador |
title_sort |
poverty in ecuador |
publisher |
World Bank, Washington, DC |
publishDate |
2012 |
url |
http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2005/05/6405185/poverty-ecuador http://hdl.handle.net/10986/10333 |
_version_ |
1764412712917401600 |