Peru : Opportunities for All, Peru Poverty Assessment

Peru faces high levels of poverty and inequality. In 2004, over half of Peru's population was poor and about 20 percent were extremely poor. Following improvements during the 1990s, poverty increased in the wake of the 1998 economic crisis, while extreme poverty remained stable. Notwithstanding...

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Main Author: World Bank
Format: Poverty Assessment
Language:English
en_US
Published: Washington, DC 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2005/12/6784200/peru-opportunities-all-poverty-assessment
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/8809
id okr-10986-8809
recordtype oai_dc
spelling okr-10986-88092021-04-23T14:02:40Z Peru : Opportunities for All, Peru Poverty Assessment World Bank ACCESS TO ASSETS AGRICULTURAL ACTIVITIES AGRICULTURAL EMPLOYMENT BASIC NEEDS COPING STRATEGIES DETERMINANTS OF POVERTY DEVELOPMENT GOALS ECONOMIC GROWTH ECONOMIC OPPORTUNITIES EMPLOYMENT CREATION INCOME INCOME DISTRIBUTION INEQUALITY LABOR MARKET POLICY IMPLICATIONS POVERTY ASSESSMENT POVERTY DYNAMICS POVERTY MAPS POVERTY MEASURES POVERTY PROFILE POVERTY REDUCTION RURAL AREAS RURAL POOR RURAL POVERTY SOCIAL PROGRAMS TARGETING TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE URBAN POOR URBAN POVERTY Peru faces high levels of poverty and inequality. In 2004, over half of Peru's population was poor and about 20 percent were extremely poor. Following improvements during the 1990s, poverty increased in the wake of the 1998 economic crisis, while extreme poverty remained stable. Notwithstanding the economic recovery since 2001, with a strong positive impact in reducing extreme poverty, progress on poverty rates however, has been limited to rural areas. A main focus of this report is to explain why growth has not translated into more rapid poverty reduction. Considering the pattern of economic volatility in Peru over the past several decades - making business people reluctant to invest in job-creating endeavors, a strong reason why poverty reduction is slow. As well, in the wake of the high investment years in the 1990s followed by the 1998 crisis, many businesses have excess production capacity that is only now, after five years of growth, beginning to show fruits. This report also points to a number of obstacles that inhibit economic growth towards greater poverty reduction in Peru, and which should be addressed by government policy reforms. Growth has been focused on natural resource extraction industries, which are highly capital-intensive, and generate few jobs, and in the rural agricultural and urban informal employment sectors, which are characterized by low productivity and, therefore, low wage growth. Strengthening the linkage between growth and more, and better-paid jobs requires micro-level policy interventions to increase incentives to formal-sector employment, and diversify economic activity into more labor-intensive areas, such as non-traditional exports. While this diversification has begun - as evidenced by the rapid growth of non-traditional exports in recent years - further policy reforms can help in the process. These reforms should be accompanied by measures to boost human capital and access to public services by the poor, thereby increasing equity in economic opportunity. On socioeconomic aspects, the report further indicates social mobility, measured as the relationship between parental and children's characteristics, and proxied by education and occupational mobility, i s low and persistent in Peru. And, given that social exclusion continues to be a problem for certain groups, tackling the issue of social mobility, through the promotion of education mobility, becomes a priority. 2012-06-22T17:34:18Z 2012-06-22T17:34:18Z 2005-12 http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2005/12/6784200/peru-opportunities-all-poverty-assessment http://hdl.handle.net/10986/8809 English en_US CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/ World Bank Washington, DC Economic & Sector Work :: Poverty Assessment Economic & Sector Work Latin America & Caribbean America South America Peru
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 ACCESS TO ASSETS
AGRICULTURAL ACTIVITIES
AGRICULTURAL EMPLOYMENT
BASIC NEEDS
COPING STRATEGIES
DETERMINANTS OF POVERTY
DEVELOPMENT GOALS
ECONOMIC GROWTH
ECONOMIC OPPORTUNITIES
EMPLOYMENT CREATION
INCOME
INCOME DISTRIBUTION
INEQUALITY
LABOR MARKET
POLICY IMPLICATIONS
POVERTY ASSESSMENT
POVERTY DYNAMICS
POVERTY MAPS
POVERTY MEASURES
POVERTY PROFILE
POVERTY REDUCTION
RURAL AREAS
RURAL POOR
RURAL POVERTY
SOCIAL PROGRAMS
TARGETING
TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE
URBAN POOR
URBAN POVERTY
spellingShingle ACCESS TO ASSETS
AGRICULTURAL ACTIVITIES
AGRICULTURAL EMPLOYMENT
BASIC NEEDS
COPING STRATEGIES
DETERMINANTS OF POVERTY
DEVELOPMENT GOALS
ECONOMIC GROWTH
ECONOMIC OPPORTUNITIES
EMPLOYMENT CREATION
INCOME
INCOME DISTRIBUTION
INEQUALITY
LABOR MARKET
POLICY IMPLICATIONS
POVERTY ASSESSMENT
POVERTY DYNAMICS
POVERTY MAPS
POVERTY MEASURES
POVERTY PROFILE
POVERTY REDUCTION
RURAL AREAS
RURAL POOR
RURAL POVERTY
SOCIAL PROGRAMS
TARGETING
TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE
URBAN POOR
URBAN POVERTY
World Bank
Peru : Opportunities for All, Peru Poverty Assessment
geographic_facet Latin America & Caribbean
America
South America
Peru
description Peru faces high levels of poverty and inequality. In 2004, over half of Peru's population was poor and about 20 percent were extremely poor. Following improvements during the 1990s, poverty increased in the wake of the 1998 economic crisis, while extreme poverty remained stable. Notwithstanding the economic recovery since 2001, with a strong positive impact in reducing extreme poverty, progress on poverty rates however, has been limited to rural areas. A main focus of this report is to explain why growth has not translated into more rapid poverty reduction. Considering the pattern of economic volatility in Peru over the past several decades - making business people reluctant to invest in job-creating endeavors, a strong reason why poverty reduction is slow. As well, in the wake of the high investment years in the 1990s followed by the 1998 crisis, many businesses have excess production capacity that is only now, after five years of growth, beginning to show fruits. This report also points to a number of obstacles that inhibit economic growth towards greater poverty reduction in Peru, and which should be addressed by government policy reforms. Growth has been focused on natural resource extraction industries, which are highly capital-intensive, and generate few jobs, and in the rural agricultural and urban informal employment sectors, which are characterized by low productivity and, therefore, low wage growth. Strengthening the linkage between growth and more, and better-paid jobs requires micro-level policy interventions to increase incentives to formal-sector employment, and diversify economic activity into more labor-intensive areas, such as non-traditional exports. While this diversification has begun - as evidenced by the rapid growth of non-traditional exports in recent years - further policy reforms can help in the process. These reforms should be accompanied by measures to boost human capital and access to public services by the poor, thereby increasing equity in economic opportunity. On socioeconomic aspects, the report further indicates social mobility, measured as the relationship between parental and children's characteristics, and proxied by education and occupational mobility, i s low and persistent in Peru. And, given that social exclusion continues to be a problem for certain groups, tackling the issue of social mobility, through the promotion of education mobility, becomes a priority.
format Economic & Sector Work :: Poverty Assessment
author World Bank
author_facet World Bank
author_sort World Bank
title Peru : Opportunities for All, Peru Poverty Assessment
title_short Peru : Opportunities for All, Peru Poverty Assessment
title_full Peru : Opportunities for All, Peru Poverty Assessment
title_fullStr Peru : Opportunities for All, Peru Poverty Assessment
title_full_unstemmed Peru : Opportunities for All, Peru Poverty Assessment
title_sort peru : opportunities for all, peru poverty assessment
publisher Washington, DC
publishDate 2012
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2005/12/6784200/peru-opportunities-all-poverty-assessment
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/8809
_version_ 1764405613599653888