Promoting Shared Prosperity in South Asia
The geography of poverty has changed. More than 70 percent of the world s poor live not in low-income countries, but in middle-income countries. In 2008, nearly 570 million people lived on less than US$1.25 a day in South Asia, compared to 385 mill...
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2014
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Online Access: | http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2013/03/17429860/promoting-shared-prosperity-south-asia http://hdl.handle.net/10986/17028 |
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okr-10986-170282021-04-23T14:03:33Z Promoting Shared Prosperity in South Asia Ghani, Ejaz Iyer, Lakshmi Mishra, Saurabh ABSOLUTE POVERTY ANTI-POVERTY ANTI-POVERTY PROGRAM BANK POLICY CENTRAL GOVERNMENT CENTRAL GOVERNMENT MINISTRIES CHANGES IN POVERTY COMMERCIAL INVESTMENTS DEBT DEVELOPING COUNTRIES DEVELOPING WORLD DEVELOPMENT ECONOMICS DEVELOPMENT INDICATORS ECONOMIC ACTIVITY ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT ECONOMIC GROWTH ECONOMIC PERFORMANCE ECONOMIC POLICY EFFICIENCY OF RESOURCE USE EXPENDITURE EXPENDITURES EXTREME POVERTY FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS FINANCIAL RESOURCES FISCAL CAPACITY FISCAL DECENTRALIZATION FISCAL DISCIPLINE FISCAL TRANSFERS FOOD SALES GLOBAL POVERTY GOVERNMENT FINANCE GOVERNMENT REVENUES GROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCT GROWTH PRO-POOR GROWTH RATE GROWTH RATES HEADCOUNT POVERTY HEADCOUNT RATIO HEALTH CARE HEALTH OUTCOMES HIGH POVERTY HOLDING INCOME GROWTH INSURANCE INSURANCE MARKETS INVESTMENT RATES LAGGING REGIONS LEVEL PLAYING FIELD LIVING STANDARDS LOCAL GOVERNMENTS LOW-INCOME COUNTRIES MACROECONOMIC STABILITY MARKET INTEGRATION MARKET PRICES MINISTRY OF FINANCE MONETARY FUND NATIONAL POVERTY NATIONAL POVERTY LINE PER CAPITA EXPENDITURES PER CAPITA INCOME PERSISTENT POVERTY POLICY MAKERS POLICY RESEARCH POOR COUNTRIES POOR PEOPLE POOR POPULATION POOR REDISTRIBUTION POOR REGIONS POORER REGIONS POVERTY ACROSS COUNTRIES POVERTY ANALYSIS POVERTY CHANGE POVERTY GAP POVERTY LEVEL POVERTY LINE POVERTY RATE POVERTY RATES POVERTY REDUCTION POVERTY TRAPS PRIVATE INVESTMENT PRO-POOR PROPERTY RIGHTS PROVINCE PUBLIC ECONOMICS PUBLIC EXPENDITURE PUBLIC EXPENDITURE REVIEW PUBLIC FINANCE PUBLIC FINANCE STATISTICS PUBLIC SECTOR REDUCING INEQUALITY REDUCING POVERTY REGIONAL DISPARITIES REGIONAL LEVEL REVENUE PER CAPITA SAFETY NETS SOCIAL SPENDING SQUARED POVERTY GAP SUBNATIONAL SUBNATIONAL GOVERNMENTS SUBNATIONAL REGIONS TAX TOTAL EXPENDITURE TOTAL GOVERNMENT EXPENDITURES TRANSPARENCY WELFARE PROGRAMS The geography of poverty has changed. More than 70 percent of the world s poor live not in low-income countries, but in middle-income countries. In 2008, nearly 570 million people lived on less than US$1.25 a day in South Asia, compared to 385 million in sub-Saharan Africa. In addition, nearly 70 percent of the poor people in South Asia live in the lagging regions. Improving the living standards of these regions is crucial to achieving the goal of shared prosperity. Economic growth is not sufficient to enable the lagging regions of South Asia to catch up with the leading regions, in terms of proportional reductions in poverty rates. Policies must be specifically targeted toward achieving greater growth and poverty reduction in these regions. One particular policy channel to achieve shared prosperity is pro-poor fiscal transfers. For the most part, interstate fiscal transfers in South Asian countries do promote equity through transfer of resources to poorer regions, but this outcome usually occurs when pro-poor redistribution has explicit rules and transparency. Further, simply directing financial resources to lagging regions may not be sufficient, and may need to be complemented with increases in capacity, transparency, and participation to facilitate accountability at the local level. Policy makers need to boost shared prosperity and take another look at the millennium development goal paradigm. A new lens is needed- one that shifts the focus of policy from national to subnational level, and from leading to lagging regions, where poverty, gender disparity, and human misery are concentrated. 2014-02-12T18:03:10Z 2014-02-12T18:03:10Z 2013-03 http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2013/03/17429860/promoting-shared-prosperity-south-asia http://hdl.handle.net/10986/17028 English en_US Economic premise;no. 110 CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/ World Bank, Washington, DC Publications & Research :: Brief Publications & Research South Asia |
repository_type |
Digital Repository |
institution_category |
Foreign Institution |
institution |
Digital Repositories |
building |
World Bank Open Knowledge Repository |
collection |
World Bank |
language |
English en_US |
topic |
ABSOLUTE POVERTY ANTI-POVERTY ANTI-POVERTY PROGRAM BANK POLICY CENTRAL GOVERNMENT CENTRAL GOVERNMENT MINISTRIES CHANGES IN POVERTY COMMERCIAL INVESTMENTS DEBT DEVELOPING COUNTRIES DEVELOPING WORLD DEVELOPMENT ECONOMICS DEVELOPMENT INDICATORS ECONOMIC ACTIVITY ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT ECONOMIC GROWTH ECONOMIC PERFORMANCE ECONOMIC POLICY EFFICIENCY OF RESOURCE USE EXPENDITURE EXPENDITURES EXTREME POVERTY FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS FINANCIAL RESOURCES FISCAL CAPACITY FISCAL DECENTRALIZATION FISCAL DISCIPLINE FISCAL TRANSFERS FOOD SALES GLOBAL POVERTY GOVERNMENT FINANCE GOVERNMENT REVENUES GROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCT GROWTH PRO-POOR GROWTH RATE GROWTH RATES HEADCOUNT POVERTY HEADCOUNT RATIO HEALTH CARE HEALTH OUTCOMES HIGH POVERTY HOLDING INCOME GROWTH INSURANCE INSURANCE MARKETS INVESTMENT RATES LAGGING REGIONS LEVEL PLAYING FIELD LIVING STANDARDS LOCAL GOVERNMENTS LOW-INCOME COUNTRIES MACROECONOMIC STABILITY MARKET INTEGRATION MARKET PRICES MINISTRY OF FINANCE MONETARY FUND NATIONAL POVERTY NATIONAL POVERTY LINE PER CAPITA EXPENDITURES PER CAPITA INCOME PERSISTENT POVERTY POLICY MAKERS POLICY RESEARCH POOR COUNTRIES POOR PEOPLE POOR POPULATION POOR REDISTRIBUTION POOR REGIONS POORER REGIONS POVERTY ACROSS COUNTRIES POVERTY ANALYSIS POVERTY CHANGE POVERTY GAP POVERTY LEVEL POVERTY LINE POVERTY RATE POVERTY RATES POVERTY REDUCTION POVERTY TRAPS PRIVATE INVESTMENT PRO-POOR PROPERTY RIGHTS PROVINCE PUBLIC ECONOMICS PUBLIC EXPENDITURE PUBLIC EXPENDITURE REVIEW PUBLIC FINANCE PUBLIC FINANCE STATISTICS PUBLIC SECTOR REDUCING INEQUALITY REDUCING POVERTY REGIONAL DISPARITIES REGIONAL LEVEL REVENUE PER CAPITA SAFETY NETS SOCIAL SPENDING SQUARED POVERTY GAP SUBNATIONAL SUBNATIONAL GOVERNMENTS SUBNATIONAL REGIONS TAX TOTAL EXPENDITURE TOTAL GOVERNMENT EXPENDITURES TRANSPARENCY WELFARE PROGRAMS |
spellingShingle |
ABSOLUTE POVERTY ANTI-POVERTY ANTI-POVERTY PROGRAM BANK POLICY CENTRAL GOVERNMENT CENTRAL GOVERNMENT MINISTRIES CHANGES IN POVERTY COMMERCIAL INVESTMENTS DEBT DEVELOPING COUNTRIES DEVELOPING WORLD DEVELOPMENT ECONOMICS DEVELOPMENT INDICATORS ECONOMIC ACTIVITY ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT ECONOMIC GROWTH ECONOMIC PERFORMANCE ECONOMIC POLICY EFFICIENCY OF RESOURCE USE EXPENDITURE EXPENDITURES EXTREME POVERTY FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS FINANCIAL RESOURCES FISCAL CAPACITY FISCAL DECENTRALIZATION FISCAL DISCIPLINE FISCAL TRANSFERS FOOD SALES GLOBAL POVERTY GOVERNMENT FINANCE GOVERNMENT REVENUES GROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCT GROWTH PRO-POOR GROWTH RATE GROWTH RATES HEADCOUNT POVERTY HEADCOUNT RATIO HEALTH CARE HEALTH OUTCOMES HIGH POVERTY HOLDING INCOME GROWTH INSURANCE INSURANCE MARKETS INVESTMENT RATES LAGGING REGIONS LEVEL PLAYING FIELD LIVING STANDARDS LOCAL GOVERNMENTS LOW-INCOME COUNTRIES MACROECONOMIC STABILITY MARKET INTEGRATION MARKET PRICES MINISTRY OF FINANCE MONETARY FUND NATIONAL POVERTY NATIONAL POVERTY LINE PER CAPITA EXPENDITURES PER CAPITA INCOME PERSISTENT POVERTY POLICY MAKERS POLICY RESEARCH POOR COUNTRIES POOR PEOPLE POOR POPULATION POOR REDISTRIBUTION POOR REGIONS POORER REGIONS POVERTY ACROSS COUNTRIES POVERTY ANALYSIS POVERTY CHANGE POVERTY GAP POVERTY LEVEL POVERTY LINE POVERTY RATE POVERTY RATES POVERTY REDUCTION POVERTY TRAPS PRIVATE INVESTMENT PRO-POOR PROPERTY RIGHTS PROVINCE PUBLIC ECONOMICS PUBLIC EXPENDITURE PUBLIC EXPENDITURE REVIEW PUBLIC FINANCE PUBLIC FINANCE STATISTICS PUBLIC SECTOR REDUCING INEQUALITY REDUCING POVERTY REGIONAL DISPARITIES REGIONAL LEVEL REVENUE PER CAPITA SAFETY NETS SOCIAL SPENDING SQUARED POVERTY GAP SUBNATIONAL SUBNATIONAL GOVERNMENTS SUBNATIONAL REGIONS TAX TOTAL EXPENDITURE TOTAL GOVERNMENT EXPENDITURES TRANSPARENCY WELFARE PROGRAMS Ghani, Ejaz Iyer, Lakshmi Mishra, Saurabh Promoting Shared Prosperity in South Asia |
geographic_facet |
South Asia |
relation |
Economic premise;no. 110 |
description |
The geography of poverty has changed.
More than 70 percent of the world s poor live not in
low-income countries, but in middle-income countries. In
2008, nearly 570 million people lived on less than US$1.25 a
day in South Asia, compared to 385 million in sub-Saharan
Africa. In addition, nearly 70 percent of the poor people in
South Asia live in the lagging regions. Improving the living
standards of these regions is crucial to achieving the goal
of shared prosperity. Economic growth is not sufficient to
enable the lagging regions of South Asia to catch up with
the leading regions, in terms of proportional reductions in
poverty rates. Policies must be specifically targeted toward
achieving greater growth and poverty reduction in these
regions. One particular policy channel to achieve shared
prosperity is pro-poor fiscal transfers. For the most part,
interstate fiscal transfers in South Asian countries do
promote equity through transfer of resources to poorer
regions, but this outcome usually occurs when pro-poor
redistribution has explicit rules and transparency. Further,
simply directing financial resources to lagging regions may
not be sufficient, and may need to be complemented with
increases in capacity, transparency, and participation to
facilitate accountability at the local level. Policy makers
need to boost shared prosperity and take another look at the
millennium development goal paradigm. A new lens is needed-
one that shifts the focus of policy from national to
subnational level, and from leading to lagging regions,
where poverty, gender disparity, and human misery are concentrated. |
format |
Publications & Research :: Brief |
author |
Ghani, Ejaz Iyer, Lakshmi Mishra, Saurabh |
author_facet |
Ghani, Ejaz Iyer, Lakshmi Mishra, Saurabh |
author_sort |
Ghani, Ejaz |
title |
Promoting Shared Prosperity in South Asia |
title_short |
Promoting Shared Prosperity in South Asia |
title_full |
Promoting Shared Prosperity in South Asia |
title_fullStr |
Promoting Shared Prosperity in South Asia |
title_full_unstemmed |
Promoting Shared Prosperity in South Asia |
title_sort |
promoting shared prosperity in south asia |
publisher |
World Bank, Washington, DC |
publishDate |
2014 |
url |
http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2013/03/17429860/promoting-shared-prosperity-south-asia http://hdl.handle.net/10986/17028 |
_version_ |
1764435205007867904 |