Losing the Gains of the Past : The Welfare and Distributional Impacts of the Twin Crises in Iraq 2014

Iraq was plunged into two simultaneous crises in the second half of 2014, one driven by a sharp decline in oil prices, the other, by the war against the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria. The severity and recurrent nature of these crises demand a fas...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Krishnan, Nandini, Olivieri, Sergio
Format: Working Paper
Language:English
en_US
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2016
Subjects:
GDP
WAR
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2016/02/25927845/losing-gains-past-welfare-distributional-impacts-twin-crises-iraq-2014
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/23900
id okr-10986-23900
recordtype oai_dc
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 HOUSEHOLD INCOMES
LIVING STANDARDS
PER CAPITA CONSUMPTION
HOUSEHOLD SIZE
HOUSEHOLD SURVEY
WELFARE MEASURE
UNEMPLOYMENT RATES
POVERTY LINE
DURABLE GOODS
ECONOMIC GROWTH
POVERTY LEVELS
POVERTY ‐HEAD
INCOME
SCHOOLING
POVERTY INDICES
PROJECTIONS
POVERTY RATES
HOUSEHOLD CONSUMPTION
NATIONAL POVERTY LINE
REGIONAL LEVEL
UTILITY MAXIMIZATION
EXPORTS
AGGREGATE POVERTY
ELASTICITY
MACROECONOMIC SHOCKS
FOOD PRICES
HOUSING
WELFARE
OPTIMIZATION
NATIONAL POVERTY
POOR PEOPLE
DISTRIBUTION
VARIABLES
DISTRIBUTIONAL EFFECTS
INPUTS
INFLATION
MEASURES
POVERTY MEASURES
INCOME GENERATION
NEW POOR
TRENDS
REGION
ECONOMIC SHOCK
NEW POOR
POVERTY REDUCTION
HOUSEHOLD INCOME
SMOOTHING CONSUMPTION
REGIONAL POVERTY
INFLUENCE
FOOD BASKET
PER CAPITA INCOME
HOUSEHOLD INCOMES
PER CAPITA INCOME
INCOME DISTRIBUTION
POVERTY GAP
SOCIAL PROTECTION
RENT
FOOD PRICE
POVERTY INCIDENCE
ECONOMETRICS
FOOD REQUIREMENTS
TRANSFERS
TRANSFERS IN KIND
POVERTY HEADCOUNT RATES
PER CAPITA CONSUMPTION
HOUSEHOLD INCOME
LACK OF INFORMATION
CARTEL
HOUSEHOLD SURVEYS
SOCIAL PROTECTION
INCOME LEVELS
CALORIE INTAKE
ECONOMIC POLICIES
DIVIDENDS
CHANGES IN POVERTY
UTILITY
PER CAPITA CONSUMPTION
FOOD ITEMS
TAXES
FOOD ITEMS
UNEMPLOYMENT
CONSUMPTION PER CAPITA
POVERTY LINES
SAFETY NET TRANSFERS
CONSUMPTION
LIVING STANDARDS
WAGES
ECONOMIC POLICIES
POVERTY RATES
UNEMPLOYMENT RATE
INCOME GAINS
FINANCIAL CRISIS
ECONOMIC PROJECTIONS
VALUE
POVERTY ‐HEAD
POVERTY LINE
AGGREGATE POVERTY
POVERTY IMPACT
ECONOMIC SECTORS
FAMILY INCOME
SAFETY NET
INCOME DISTRIBUTION
AGRICULTURAL SECTOR
EMPLOYMENT STATUS
AGRICULTURE
RURAL
FOOD BASKET
POVERTY LINES
TRANSFERS IN KIND
NATIONAL POVERTY LINE
ECONOMIC SECTOR
PRIVATE TRANSFERS
ECONOMIC SECTOR
POVERTY INDICES
INFLATION RATES
INSURANCE
TAXATION
MACROECONOMIC SHOCKS
TRADE
POOR POPULATION
GDP
WELFARE MEASURES
GOODS
FINANCIAL CRISIS
HOUSEHOLD CONSUMPTION PER CAPITA
THEORY
FOOD SHARE
REGIONS
GROWTH RATE
WAR
BASIC FOOD REQUIREMENTS
WELFARE MEASURES
PRIVATE TRANSFERS
ACCESS TO SERVICES
POOR HOUSEHOLDS
DURABLE GOODS
POVERTY
ACCESS TO SERVICES
INCIDENCE OF POVERTY
INCIDENCE OF POVERTY
HOUSEHOLD CONSUMPTION
POVERTY GAP
INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT
INCOME GAINS
POVERTY MEASURES
HOUSEHOLD WELFARE
UNDERESTIMATES
POOR
CONSUMPTION PER CAPITA
MACROECONOMIC POLICIES
WELFARE MEASURE
POVERTY HEADCOUNT RATES
TOTAL OUTPUT
POVERTY IMPACT
LACK OF INFORMATION
FOOD PRICES
CONSUMPTION LEVELS
OUTCOMES
POVERTY INCIDENCE
PRICES
GROWTH PROJECTIONS
DEVELOPMENT POLICY
INCOME GROUPS
INEQUALITY
POOR HOUSEHOLDS
HOUSEHOLD SURVEY
spellingShingle HOUSEHOLD INCOMES
LIVING STANDARDS
PER CAPITA CONSUMPTION
HOUSEHOLD SIZE
HOUSEHOLD SURVEY
WELFARE MEASURE
UNEMPLOYMENT RATES
POVERTY LINE
DURABLE GOODS
ECONOMIC GROWTH
POVERTY LEVELS
POVERTY ‐HEAD
INCOME
SCHOOLING
POVERTY INDICES
PROJECTIONS
POVERTY RATES
HOUSEHOLD CONSUMPTION
NATIONAL POVERTY LINE
REGIONAL LEVEL
UTILITY MAXIMIZATION
EXPORTS
AGGREGATE POVERTY
ELASTICITY
MACROECONOMIC SHOCKS
FOOD PRICES
HOUSING
WELFARE
OPTIMIZATION
NATIONAL POVERTY
POOR PEOPLE
DISTRIBUTION
VARIABLES
DISTRIBUTIONAL EFFECTS
INPUTS
INFLATION
MEASURES
POVERTY MEASURES
INCOME GENERATION
NEW POOR
TRENDS
REGION
ECONOMIC SHOCK
NEW POOR
POVERTY REDUCTION
HOUSEHOLD INCOME
SMOOTHING CONSUMPTION
REGIONAL POVERTY
INFLUENCE
FOOD BASKET
PER CAPITA INCOME
HOUSEHOLD INCOMES
PER CAPITA INCOME
INCOME DISTRIBUTION
POVERTY GAP
SOCIAL PROTECTION
RENT
FOOD PRICE
POVERTY INCIDENCE
ECONOMETRICS
FOOD REQUIREMENTS
TRANSFERS
TRANSFERS IN KIND
POVERTY HEADCOUNT RATES
PER CAPITA CONSUMPTION
HOUSEHOLD INCOME
LACK OF INFORMATION
CARTEL
HOUSEHOLD SURVEYS
SOCIAL PROTECTION
INCOME LEVELS
CALORIE INTAKE
ECONOMIC POLICIES
DIVIDENDS
CHANGES IN POVERTY
UTILITY
PER CAPITA CONSUMPTION
FOOD ITEMS
TAXES
FOOD ITEMS
UNEMPLOYMENT
CONSUMPTION PER CAPITA
POVERTY LINES
SAFETY NET TRANSFERS
CONSUMPTION
LIVING STANDARDS
WAGES
ECONOMIC POLICIES
POVERTY RATES
UNEMPLOYMENT RATE
INCOME GAINS
FINANCIAL CRISIS
ECONOMIC PROJECTIONS
VALUE
POVERTY ‐HEAD
POVERTY LINE
AGGREGATE POVERTY
POVERTY IMPACT
ECONOMIC SECTORS
FAMILY INCOME
SAFETY NET
INCOME DISTRIBUTION
AGRICULTURAL SECTOR
EMPLOYMENT STATUS
AGRICULTURE
RURAL
FOOD BASKET
POVERTY LINES
TRANSFERS IN KIND
NATIONAL POVERTY LINE
ECONOMIC SECTOR
PRIVATE TRANSFERS
ECONOMIC SECTOR
POVERTY INDICES
INFLATION RATES
INSURANCE
TAXATION
MACROECONOMIC SHOCKS
TRADE
POOR POPULATION
GDP
WELFARE MEASURES
GOODS
FINANCIAL CRISIS
HOUSEHOLD CONSUMPTION PER CAPITA
THEORY
FOOD SHARE
REGIONS
GROWTH RATE
WAR
BASIC FOOD REQUIREMENTS
WELFARE MEASURES
PRIVATE TRANSFERS
ACCESS TO SERVICES
POOR HOUSEHOLDS
DURABLE GOODS
POVERTY
ACCESS TO SERVICES
INCIDENCE OF POVERTY
INCIDENCE OF POVERTY
HOUSEHOLD CONSUMPTION
POVERTY GAP
INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT
INCOME GAINS
POVERTY MEASURES
HOUSEHOLD WELFARE
UNDERESTIMATES
POOR
CONSUMPTION PER CAPITA
MACROECONOMIC POLICIES
WELFARE MEASURE
POVERTY HEADCOUNT RATES
TOTAL OUTPUT
POVERTY IMPACT
LACK OF INFORMATION
FOOD PRICES
CONSUMPTION LEVELS
OUTCOMES
POVERTY INCIDENCE
PRICES
GROWTH PROJECTIONS
DEVELOPMENT POLICY
INCOME GROUPS
INEQUALITY
POOR HOUSEHOLDS
HOUSEHOLD SURVEY
Krishnan, Nandini
Olivieri, Sergio
Losing the Gains of the Past : The Welfare and Distributional Impacts of the Twin Crises in Iraq 2014
geographic_facet Middle East and North Africa
Iraq
relation Policy Research Working Paper;No. 7567
description Iraq was plunged into two simultaneous crises in the second half of 2014, one driven by a sharp decline in oil prices, the other, by the war against the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria. The severity and recurrent nature of these crises demand a fast understanding and quantification of their welfare impact, which is critical for policy makers. This paper employs an innovative extension of the micro-simulation methodology to provide an ex ante estimate and analysis of the complex and dynamic poverty and distributional impact of the twin crises. The results show an almost complete erosion of the welfare gains of the past, with poverty falling back to 2007 levels and a 20 percent increase in the number of the poor. While the incidence of poverty is higher among internally displaced persons than the rest of the population (except in the Islamic State–affected governorates, where poverty is higher), internally displaced persons make up only a small proportion of Iraq's eight million poor in 2014. The rest comprise of households who already lived below the poverty line, or those who have fallen below the poverty line in the face of the massive economic disruptions the country is facing. The welfare impact of the crises varies widely across space, with the largest increases in poverty headcount rates in Kurdistan and the Islamic State–affected governorates. Yet, the poorest regions in the 2014 crisis scenario are the same as in 2012, the currently Islamic State–affected, and the South, with poverty rates of 40 and 30 percent, respectively. Although the simulated results are not strictly comparable to ex post micro data estimates, because of survey coverage constraints, overall the results are very much in line, particularly in Kurdistan and the South.
format Working Paper
author Krishnan, Nandini
Olivieri, Sergio
author_facet Krishnan, Nandini
Olivieri, Sergio
author_sort Krishnan, Nandini
title Losing the Gains of the Past : The Welfare and Distributional Impacts of the Twin Crises in Iraq 2014
title_short Losing the Gains of the Past : The Welfare and Distributional Impacts of the Twin Crises in Iraq 2014
title_full Losing the Gains of the Past : The Welfare and Distributional Impacts of the Twin Crises in Iraq 2014
title_fullStr Losing the Gains of the Past : The Welfare and Distributional Impacts of the Twin Crises in Iraq 2014
title_full_unstemmed Losing the Gains of the Past : The Welfare and Distributional Impacts of the Twin Crises in Iraq 2014
title_sort losing the gains of the past : the welfare and distributional impacts of the twin crises in iraq 2014
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2016
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2016/02/25927845/losing-gains-past-welfare-distributional-impacts-twin-crises-iraq-2014
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/23900
_version_ 1764455101745856512
spelling okr-10986-239002021-04-23T14:04:18Z Losing the Gains of the Past : The Welfare and Distributional Impacts of the Twin Crises in Iraq 2014 Krishnan, Nandini Olivieri, Sergio HOUSEHOLD INCOMES LIVING STANDARDS PER CAPITA CONSUMPTION HOUSEHOLD SIZE HOUSEHOLD SURVEY WELFARE MEASURE UNEMPLOYMENT RATES POVERTY LINE DURABLE GOODS ECONOMIC GROWTH POVERTY LEVELS POVERTY ‐HEAD INCOME SCHOOLING POVERTY INDICES PROJECTIONS POVERTY RATES HOUSEHOLD CONSUMPTION NATIONAL POVERTY LINE REGIONAL LEVEL UTILITY MAXIMIZATION EXPORTS AGGREGATE POVERTY ELASTICITY MACROECONOMIC SHOCKS FOOD PRICES HOUSING WELFARE OPTIMIZATION NATIONAL POVERTY POOR PEOPLE DISTRIBUTION VARIABLES DISTRIBUTIONAL EFFECTS INPUTS INFLATION MEASURES POVERTY MEASURES INCOME GENERATION NEW POOR TRENDS REGION ECONOMIC SHOCK NEW POOR POVERTY REDUCTION HOUSEHOLD INCOME SMOOTHING CONSUMPTION REGIONAL POVERTY INFLUENCE FOOD BASKET PER CAPITA INCOME HOUSEHOLD INCOMES PER CAPITA INCOME INCOME DISTRIBUTION POVERTY GAP SOCIAL PROTECTION RENT FOOD PRICE POVERTY INCIDENCE ECONOMETRICS FOOD REQUIREMENTS TRANSFERS TRANSFERS IN KIND POVERTY HEADCOUNT RATES PER CAPITA CONSUMPTION HOUSEHOLD INCOME LACK OF INFORMATION CARTEL HOUSEHOLD SURVEYS SOCIAL PROTECTION INCOME LEVELS CALORIE INTAKE ECONOMIC POLICIES DIVIDENDS CHANGES IN POVERTY UTILITY PER CAPITA CONSUMPTION FOOD ITEMS TAXES FOOD ITEMS UNEMPLOYMENT CONSUMPTION PER CAPITA POVERTY LINES SAFETY NET TRANSFERS CONSUMPTION LIVING STANDARDS WAGES ECONOMIC POLICIES POVERTY RATES UNEMPLOYMENT RATE INCOME GAINS FINANCIAL CRISIS ECONOMIC PROJECTIONS VALUE POVERTY ‐HEAD POVERTY LINE AGGREGATE POVERTY POVERTY IMPACT ECONOMIC SECTORS FAMILY INCOME SAFETY NET INCOME DISTRIBUTION AGRICULTURAL SECTOR EMPLOYMENT STATUS AGRICULTURE RURAL FOOD BASKET POVERTY LINES TRANSFERS IN KIND NATIONAL POVERTY LINE ECONOMIC SECTOR PRIVATE TRANSFERS ECONOMIC SECTOR POVERTY INDICES INFLATION RATES INSURANCE TAXATION MACROECONOMIC SHOCKS TRADE POOR POPULATION GDP WELFARE MEASURES GOODS FINANCIAL CRISIS HOUSEHOLD CONSUMPTION PER CAPITA THEORY FOOD SHARE REGIONS GROWTH RATE WAR BASIC FOOD REQUIREMENTS WELFARE MEASURES PRIVATE TRANSFERS ACCESS TO SERVICES POOR HOUSEHOLDS DURABLE GOODS POVERTY ACCESS TO SERVICES INCIDENCE OF POVERTY INCIDENCE OF POVERTY HOUSEHOLD CONSUMPTION POVERTY GAP INFORMAL EMPLOYMENT INCOME GAINS POVERTY MEASURES HOUSEHOLD WELFARE UNDERESTIMATES POOR CONSUMPTION PER CAPITA MACROECONOMIC POLICIES WELFARE MEASURE POVERTY HEADCOUNT RATES TOTAL OUTPUT POVERTY IMPACT LACK OF INFORMATION FOOD PRICES CONSUMPTION LEVELS OUTCOMES POVERTY INCIDENCE PRICES GROWTH PROJECTIONS DEVELOPMENT POLICY INCOME GROUPS INEQUALITY POOR HOUSEHOLDS HOUSEHOLD SURVEY Iraq was plunged into two simultaneous crises in the second half of 2014, one driven by a sharp decline in oil prices, the other, by the war against the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria. The severity and recurrent nature of these crises demand a fast understanding and quantification of their welfare impact, which is critical for policy makers. This paper employs an innovative extension of the micro-simulation methodology to provide an ex ante estimate and analysis of the complex and dynamic poverty and distributional impact of the twin crises. The results show an almost complete erosion of the welfare gains of the past, with poverty falling back to 2007 levels and a 20 percent increase in the number of the poor. While the incidence of poverty is higher among internally displaced persons than the rest of the population (except in the Islamic State–affected governorates, where poverty is higher), internally displaced persons make up only a small proportion of Iraq's eight million poor in 2014. The rest comprise of households who already lived below the poverty line, or those who have fallen below the poverty line in the face of the massive economic disruptions the country is facing. The welfare impact of the crises varies widely across space, with the largest increases in poverty headcount rates in Kurdistan and the Islamic State–affected governorates. Yet, the poorest regions in the 2014 crisis scenario are the same as in 2012, the currently Islamic State–affected, and the South, with poverty rates of 40 and 30 percent, respectively. Although the simulated results are not strictly comparable to ex post micro data estimates, because of survey coverage constraints, overall the results are very much in line, particularly in Kurdistan and the South. 2016-03-09T18:13:24Z 2016-03-09T18:13:24Z 2016-02 Working Paper http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2016/02/25927845/losing-gains-past-welfare-distributional-impacts-twin-crises-iraq-2014 http://hdl.handle.net/10986/23900 English en_US Policy Research Working Paper;No. 7567 CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/ World Bank World Bank, Washington, DC Publications & Research Publications & Research :: Policy Research Working Paper Middle East and North Africa Iraq