International Development Economics Associates (IDEAs)
organized a three day workshop followed by a three
day international conference at Tsinghua University
in Beijing, China. The workshop was held between 3-5th
June and the conference followed between the 7-9th
of June, 2007. The events were organized to focus
discussions on the recent economic growth witnessed
in some parts of the developing world, and its impact
on economic structures and thereby on income distribution
and poverty reduction.
The issue is particularly relevant as the recent
decades have thrown up interesting dilemmas for the
developing world. While many countries have witnessed
some economic growth with a few experiencing spectacular
growth, the process of growth has often been accompanied
by increases in income inequality and inadequate reduction
of poverty. This has been a rather disappointing trend
since the policies of structural reforms and globalization
have always been associated with promises of poverty
eradication, a reduction in the inequality of income
distribution, and a general rise in welfare for developing
economies.
Therefore, this workshop and conference intended to
focus on the extent and nature of growth in developing
economies, particularly in Asia where growth has been
very rapid. It aimed to explore the extent to which
the growth process has been related to shifts in underlying
economic structures with adverse impacts on poverty
and inequality, or to policy paradigms, both domestic
and external, which have created these contradictions
within the growing developing world. The impact on
livelihood and employment patterns, sectoral shifts
in investment, production, and incomes, the impact
on human development and gender were all sought to
be studied in detail. Within developing Asia, India
and China have proved to be very significant cases
given the combination of high growth and growing income
inequalities. Therefore the events also looked at
growth processes in these economies, to find what
may be the lessons and implications for other developing
economies.
Workshop
entitled "Development Experiences and Policy
Options for a Changing World''
3-5th June, 2007
Within the context of the overall
theme, the workshop intended to focus on a somewhat
broader perspective than the conference and therefore
the sub title for the event was decided accordingly.
It had about 47 young participants and 8 instructors.
In continuation of IDEAs’ workshops held round the
world in partnership with universities and organizations
on issues of economic development, the Beijing workshop
invited applications to participate in the workshop
and attend the conference from young economists from
developing countries who have completed or are close
to completing their Ph.D. In addition, individuals
with a strong economics background involved in advocacy
work with civil society organizations or engaged in
policy making activities were also encouraged to apply.
The selection process laid special emphasis on participants
from and based in developing countries, and also ensured
a representative regional and gender distribution.
Selected participants were provided full funding for
travel, besides boarding and lodging, to attend both
the workshop and the conference. Some others also
attended at their own cost or by sharing the cost,
though they were limited in number so as not to take
away opportunities from developing country scholars
who are unable to cover their own costs. Researchers
from the developing South and Asia were especially
encouraged to apply.
Participants represented a wide range of regional
and academic or work backgrounds. Within China, participants
came from regions, including some very interior regions.
Along with members of Tsinghua, Renmin, and Beijing
Normal Universities from Beijing, there were participants
from the Shanghai Academy of Social Sciences, and
the School of Economics, Shanghai University of Finance
& Economics. In addition there were participants
from the Xiamen University of Fujian, Nankai University
in Tianjin, School of Economics, Henan University,
Nanjing University of Economics and Finances, and
Anhui University, Hefei. There were also a number
of representatives of civil society organisations,
who have been working on the field in many different
parts of China.
Participants from the rest of the world covered a
broad spectrum of regions and organizations. Some
were from the Indian statistical Institute, Kolkata,
University of Delhi and Jawaharlal Nehru University,
New Delhi, all from India. From Turkey, Dokuz Eylül
University, Izmir, and Atilim University in Ankara
were represented along with Universidade Federal do
Rio de Janeiro, and Federal University of Minas Gerais
(UFMG), both from Brazil. In addition, there were
participants from Chulalongkorn University, Bangkok,
Thailand, Oxfam-South Asia Regional Centre, The Open
University of Sri Lanka, University of Nairobi, Nairobi,
Kenya, Pontificia Universidad Católica Madre
y Maestra of the Dominican Republic, Centre for Economic
and Social Development, Baku, Azerbaijan, African
Institute for Agrarian Studies, Harare, Zimbabwe,
University of Essex, UK, and Centro de Investigaciones
de Economía Internacional Universidad de La
Habana Havana, Cuba.
The workshop was organized in four modules of 1.5
to 2 hours on each of the three days. Out of the total
of 12 modules, 8 took the form of lecture-cum-discussion
sessions of one and a half hours each, delivered by
senior academicians and policymakers from around the
world. These consisted of a 45 minute to 1 hour lecture
followed by an intensive question answer cum discussion
session. In the remaining 4 sessions, some of the
young participants were invited to make presentations
in their current area of research. These presentations
were organized to promote alternative research and
its active dissemination among younger practitioners.
These sessions were also intended to generate free
and frank discussions between young participants as
well as invite comments from the senior instructors.
There were a total of 16 presentations from the workshop
participants.
The instructors for the workshop were drawn from noted
economists across the world, most of whom belong to
the IDEAs network and share similar but still different
outlooks on the issues of economic growth, development
policies, and human development. Some of them have
also worked on the field of poverty in its different
dimensions from various micro and macro perspectives.
It was the objective of the workshop to acquaint the
participants with a diverse range of case studies
and policy perspectives, and therefore the instructors’
panel was drawn based on their ability to contribute
a well informed and wide variety of specialized lectures.
Prof. C.P.
Chandrasekhar, IDEAS executive Committee
member, and Professor of Economics, Centre for Economic
Studies and Planning, Jawaharlal Nehru University,
New Delhi, India took the first lecture on the 3rd
of June, 2007, on ''Some
Implications of New, High-Growth Development Trajectories:
Contrasting China and India''.
This was followed by a lecture by Prof.
Yukio Ikemoto, Professor of Economics,
Tokyo University, Japan, who talked on the "World
Income Distribution and Asian Economic Development:
1820-2003". Prof.
Jayati Ghosh, Executive Secretary,
IDEAs and also a professor at the Centre for Economic
Studies and Planning, Jawaharlal Nehru University,
New Delhi, India gave the post lunch lecture on ''Developing
Country Surpluses and Implications for Macroeconomic
Policies''.
On the second day, 4th of June, Dr.
Andong Zhu from the School of Humanities
and Social Sciences, Tsinghua University gave an informative
lecture on "The
Chinese Economy in the past three decades: Achievements
and Problems". He was followed
by another Chinese economist, Prof.
Dic Lo, from the School of Economics,
Renmin University, Beijing, who is also a visiting
professor at the School of Oriental and African Studies
(SOAS), London, UK, who spoke on ''Assessing
the Role of Foreign Direct Investment in China's Economic
Development: Towards a Broader Vision''(Download
the paper). The third l;ecture of the day
was given by Dereje
Alemayehu, the East Africa Programme
Manager of Christian Aid, on the theme of ''Development
Economics was Bright and Optimistic: Reflections on
Early Years of the Discipline''.
The third and final day of the workshop had two lectures
scheduled. The first was taken by Prof.
Jan Kregel, Distinguished Research
Professor, Centre for Full Employment & Price
Stability, University of Missouri, Kansas City, who
spoke on ''Development
Policy in an Unequal World: Financing for Development
and Growth''. The second was taken
by Prof. Wang Shaoguang,
Professor of Political Science, Chinese University
of Hong Kong, Hong Kong, China. His lecture was entitled
''The
Great Transformation: The Double Movement in China''.
The 16 presentations by the young scholars, which
are listed below, represented a wide variety of themes.
Day 1, 3rd June, 2007:
Changing Patterns of Inequality
Vugar Bayramov
''Globalization and Inequality
in CIS countries''
Xie Jing
"Income Distribution and
Economic Growth in China during the Past 3 Decades''
Liu Fengyi
''Loss in State-Owned Assets
and the Gap between the Rich and the Poor''
Ruttiya Bhula-Or
" Increasing Demand for
Skilled Workers in Thailand in the Era of Globalization"
Day 2, 4th
June, 2007: Economic Policies and Alternatives
Gilberto Libanio
''Manufacturing Industry and
Economic Growth in Latin America: A Kaldorian Approach''
(Download
the paper)
Surajit Das
''Macroeconomic Policy under
Regime of Free Capital Flows''
Aylin Abuk Duygulu
''The New Face of Central Bank
Policies and Its Reflections in Developing Countries''
Walter Chambati
''Impact of Fast Track Land
Reform on Farm Workers and Farm Labour processes in
Zimbabwe''
Day 3, 5th
June, 2007: Inequality and Poverty
Aparajita Bakshi
''Social Inequality In Land
Ownership In India: A Study With Particular Reference
To West Bengal'' (Download
the Tables)
Zhao Feng
"The Rate of Surplus Value,
the Composition of Capital, and the Rate of Profit
in the Chinese Manufacturing Industry 1978-2004"
Fowad Murtaza
''Incidence of Poverty in Pakistan:
Methods and Measurement''
Oyuke Abel Omollo
''Local
Level Funding as a Poverty Exit Route: Experiences
from Local Level Jurisdictions in Kenya''
Day 3, 5th June, 2007:
Outcomes for Workers and Peasants
Arindam Banerjee
''Neo-Liberal Economic Policy
and Peasant Classes: The question of farm profitability
and indebtedness in Indian agriculture''
(Download
the paper).
Zheng Feihu
"FDI,Cluster and Labour
Allocation in the Past Three Decades in China"
Fayq al Akayleh
''Agricultural Development in
the Age of Trade Liberalization: What Did We Really
Get?
Song Bingtao,
"The Efficiency of Public
Finance, the Role of Government and the Economic Development
in Undeveloped Areas''
The workshop also promoted a free and
passionate exchange of ideas and an interaction among
all the participants, which was not limited to only
issues of economic development, but spread to the
interaction of cultural identities and individual
personalities. As intended by the organizers, the
workshop taught, along with an alternative perspective
to issues of equitable and inclusive economic and
social development, a tolerance towards and understanding
of each other’s cultures and identities.
The International
Conference on
'Policy Perspectives on Growth, Economic Structures
and Poverty Reduction',
7-9th June, 2007, Tsinghua University, Beijing, China
The conference was organized with a view to promoting
interaction between development theorists and practitioners
across the world and to build and strengthen a network
of committed individuals who are able to express unorthodox
perspectives on economic development. Therefore one
aim of the event was to present economic issues from
a critical perspective at variance with mainstream
ideas or results. It also aimed to encourage a clear
set of policy guidelines for inclusive and equitable
growth in developing economies. The set of policy
guidelines also had to be such that civil society
organizations working at the micro level could identify
with and include in their articulation of grass root
needs for development.
The conference included a total of about 80 participants
of which about 41 were from outside China, while participants,
both young and senior, from Beijing, Shanghai, Tianjin,
Nanjing, Fujian, Henan and other parts of China made
up the rest. The participants consisted of senior
economists, policy makers, members of civil society
organizations and other development activists.
The event highlighted latest research output on changes
in inequality and poverty in different parts of the
world, particularly in developing Asia. It also focused
strongly on the relevant policy measures for effective
poverty reduction. 18 papers focusing on a variety
of issues ranging from the global economy to country
experiences were presented by the participants. There
were specific focuses on rural and urban poverty and
the role of different strategies for their eradication.
The role of social security or social assistance measures
got special attention in this regard. The conference
ended with a panel discussion on the policy lessons
for developing economies as well as a review of the
papers presented and issues brought forward by the
conference.
Some of the main issues which emerged were the question
of governance, of development planning and its financing,
economic structures and shifts thereof in affecting
growth and human development, the interaction between
agriculture and industry. The other set of crucial
issues which were widely discussed were the role,
measurement and nature of poverty and the impact of
poverty eradication programmes and their interaction
with the macroeconomic policy regimes in developing
nations. Employment guarantee schemes as instruments
of poverty reduction were also discussed. Finally
the importance of promoting human development through
health and education facilities for building future
human capital came up again and again, and was looked
at both as a right of the people as well as an investment
for future growth. There was wide scale participation
and sharing of experiences by senior researchers,
policy makers and other development professionals,
along with young scholars.
During the opening session on the 7th of June, a number
of eminent academicians and civil society representatives
delivered opening speeches while highlighting the
importance and relevance of the issues under discussion.
Prof C. P. Chandrasekhar, member, Executive committee
of IDEAs, welcomed the participants on behalf of IDEAs
and emphasized the crucial importance of mutual understanding
and collaborations in order to build a world of justifiable
development alternatives. The other speakers included
Prof. Cheng Enfu, Director, Marxism Academy, Chinese
Academy of Social Sciences, Beijing, China, the Dean
of the School of Humanities and Social Sciences, Tsinghua
University, Prof. Li Qiang, the Dean of the School
of Economics, Prof. Yang Ruilong and the Director
of Action Aid, China , Ms Zhang Lanying.
Below is a list of the speakers and paper titles arranged
thematically which were presented during the conference.
June 7, 2007
Session I: Analytical Issues
Chair: C P Chandrasekhar
Papers:
Jan Kregel
Distinguished Research Professor, Centre for Full
Employment & Price Stability, University of Missouri,
Kansas City "Can
identifying the causes of poverty give us insight
into eliminating poverty?"
Saul Keifman
Professor, Department of Economics, University of
Buenes Aires, Argentina
"The
relationship between the exchange rate and employment:
Revisiting the structuralist explanation"
(Download
the paper)
Francis Cripps
Alphametrics Ltd, Francis Cripps & Associates
(IT) Co. Ltd, Bangkok, Thailand "Exchange
rates and income distribution"
(Download
the paper)
Discussant: Abhijit Sen
Member, Planning Commission, India and Professor,
Centre for Economic Studies and Planning, Jawaharlal
Nehru University, New Delhi, India
Session II: Comparative
Experiences 1
Chair: Jayati Ghosh
Executive Secretary, IDEAs and Professor, Centre for
Economic Studies and Planning, Jawaharlal Nehru University,
New Delhi, India
Papers:
Mehdi Shafaeddin
Retired, Department of Globalization and Development,
UNCTAD, Geneva, Switzerland
"From
export promotion to import substitution; comparative
experience of China and Mexico in electronic industry"
(Download
the paper)
Julius Kiiza
Senior Researcher, Makarere University, Uganda ''The
myth of donor-driven "structural" economic
transformation: Understanding Taiwan Province of China's lessons for
Uganda''
Du Yang
Professor, Chief of Division of Labor and Human Captial,
Institute of Population and Labor Economics, Chinese
Academy of Social Sciences, Beijing, China ''Urban
poverty and social assistance programme in China''
(Download
the paper)
Discussant: Dic Lo
Senior Lecturer in Economics, School of Oriental and
African Studies, University of London, and Director
of the Centre of Research in Comparative Political
Economy at the School of Economics, Renmin University
of China
Session III: Comparative
experiences 2
Chair: Xu Jiankang
Senior Researcher, the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences
Papers:
Yukio Ikemoto
Professor of Economics, Tokyo University, Japan "Poverty
alleviation policies and ethnic minority people in
Vietnam: A capability approach"
(Download
the paper)
Upali Vidanapathirana
Lecturer, the Open University of Sri Lanka, Colombo,
Sri Lanka ''Liberalization
policies and economic divide in Sri Lanka: an appraisal
of post reform experience''
(Download
the paper)
Discussant: Parthapratim Pal
Assistant Professor, Indian Institute of Management,
Kolkata, India
June 8, 2007
Session I: Institutional
change and income distribution in China
Chair: Jan Kregel
Papers:
Carl Riskin
Professor of Economics, Weatherhead East Asian Institute,
Columbia University, USA "Explaining
China's changing income distribution: market forces
vs. social benefits". (Download
the paper)
Li Xiaobei
Assistant Vice President, Sichuan University, P. R.
China ''An analysis of the development
of Sino-Japanese economic relations''
Discussant: Andong Zhu
School of Humanities and Social Sciences, Tsinghua
University, Beijing, China
Session II: Issues in rural
poverty reduction in China
Chair: Long Denggao
Professor, Economics Institute, Tsinghua University,
Beijing, China
Papers:
Thomas Chan
Professor, Hong Kong Polytechnic University, Hong
Kong, China ''A
new turn in China's agricultural policy''
Yuk-shing Cheng
Department of Economics, Hong Kong Baptist University,
Hong Kong, China ''Building
pro-rural economic institutions in China''
(Download
the paper)
Discussant: Dic Lo
Session III: Poverty
and income distribution in India
Chair: Lei Da
Professor, former vice dean, School of Economics,
Renmin University of China, Beijing
Papers:
Himanshu (with Abhijit Sen)
Fellow (Economics), The Centre de Sciences Humaines
(CSH), New Delhi, India ''Trends
in poverty and income distribution in India: Evidence
from the NSSO''
Amitabh Kundu
Dean, School of Social Sciences, and Professor, Centre
for Studies in Regional Development, Jawaharlal Nehru
University, New Delhi, India "Migration
and urbanisation in India in the context of the goal
of poverty alleviation" (Download
the paper)
Discussant: Ratan Khasnabis
Professor, Department of Economics, and Dean, School
of Business and Management Studies, University of
Kolkata, India
Session IV: Economic restructuring
and income distribution in Latin America
Chair: Saul Keifman
Papers:
Roxana Maurizio
Researcher- Professor, Universidad Nacional de General
Sarmiento (UNGS), Buenos Aires, Argentina ''Macroeconomic
regime, trade openness, unemployment and inequality:
the Argentine Experience'' (Download
the paper)
Elda Molina Diaz
Researcher, Centro de Investigaciones de Economía
Internacional Universidad de La Habana, Havana, Cuba
''Cuba:
Economic restructuring, recent trends and main challenges''
(Download
the paper)
Discussant: Francis Cripps
June 9, 2007.
Session I: Poverty reduction
policies
Chair: Mehdi Shafaeddin
Papers:
Dereje Alemayehu
East Africa Programme Manager, Christian Aid ''Taming
the 'predatory' state – the major antipoverty project
in Africa''
Smita Gupta
Fellow, Institute of Human Development. New Delhi,
India ''Significance
and limitations of India's National Rural Employment
Guarantee Programme in addressing rural poverty''
(Download
the paper)
Discussant: Darshini Mahadevia
School of Planning, CEPT University, Ahmedabad, India
10.30 to 11 a.m. Coffee
11.00 a.m. to 1.00 p.m.
Panel discussion: Policy implications
Chair and Speaker: Cui Zhiyuan
School of Public Policy and Management, Tsinghua University,
Beijing, China
Abhijit Sen
Member, Planning Commission, India and Professor,
Centre for Economic Studies and Planning, Jawaharlal
Nehru University, New Delhi, India
Jan Kregel
Distinguished Research Professor, Centre for Full
Employment & Price Stability, University of Missouri,
Kansas City
Amitabh Kundu
Dean, School of Social Sciences, and Professor, Centre
for Studies in Regional Development, Jawaharlal Nehru
University, New Delhi, India
Yuk Shing Cheng
Department of Economics, Hong Kong Baptist University,
Hong Kong, China
Vote of thanks: Jayati Ghosh
Executive Secretary, IDEAs.
Discussion and Policy Implications
As has been pointed out before, a major objective
of the conference was to look at policy choices for
poverty reduction and ensuring a more egalitarian
distribution of income and growth among all segments
of the population. In this regard, both urban and
rural poverty and income distribution were taken as
important. Rural poverty and income distribution has
remained a key area in development literature, especially
in the current context of low growth rates in output
and employment in most developing countries. In the
era of open trade and capital flows, the agrarian
sector has been clearly adversely affected. But alongside,
given the trend of urban centric growth and relative
stagnation of agriculture, which has resulted in large-scale
migration to urban areas, rapid urbanization and pressures
on the urban sector as a whole, urban poverty and
income distribution emerge as important issues. In
both India and China, the two leading Asian economies,
both urban and rural poverty and income distribution
variables have shown interesting characteristics.
In China, while both rural and urban poverty showed
a decline, urban poverty reduction has been hampered
by the increasing number of rural migrants who have
been largely outside the social security networks
and employment guarantee provisions. It was estimated
earlier that the poverty rate among the migrants was
as high as 50% even in early 2000 and this substantially
underestimated the official poverty statistics. The
papers presented at the IDEAs’ conference showed that
in the most recent period, poverty and inequality
within rural and urban areas showed some decline,
the decline more pronounced in the rural areas.
China:
The papers presented at the conference clearly pointed
towards some interesting trends in China.
- In rural areas, improvements took place as a result
of “a large increase in wage-earning jobs in poorer
regions of the country between 1995 and 2002, and
partly by a decline in the extreme regressiveness
of net taxes” (Carl Riskin, “Explaining China's
changing income distribution: market forces vs.
social benefits"). Therefore, both market forces
and social policy changes contributed to this reduction.
Of course rural poverty had for some time been positively
affected by the migration to urban areas which helped
ease pressure on rural livelihoods but increased
the pressures on the urban system.
- In rural areas of China, building pro poor institutions
remained the major challenge to policy (Yuk Shing
Cheng, “''Building pro-rural economic institutions
in China''). The building, for example, of institutions
like rural credit cooperatives could present a solution
to the problem of agrarian stagnation and rural
poverty. With funds injection into the system and
reform of the functioning structure, the institution
has improved its performance dramatically after
reforms.
- In urban areas of China, the reduction came directly
as a result of changes in social policy. In the
recent period, “important subsidies that been regressively
distributed became better targeted, while the size
of social benefits programmes targeted at the unemployed
and poor urban residents grew as well” (Carl Riskin,
“Explaining China's changing income distribution:
market forces vs. social benefits"). One major
reason was that the Hukou system by which migration
was banned in China for a long period was abolished.
The earlier ban implied that rural migrants were
denied job security, at par wages and social benefits
in urban areas.
- The paper by Riskin strongly argued that social
benefits, as a part of the overall social policy
structure, were a key determinant of declining rural
and urban inequalities. Social benefits covered
by the paper included health, housing, food, and
other in-kind transfers. It argued that it was imperative
that social benefits are distributed progressively
rather than regressively to offset the negative
effects, if any, of market reform. Before 2002,
urban social benefits, which were progressively
distributed helped to counteract the negative effects
of market reform, but could not counter it completely.
In the rural areas, social benefits were regressively
distributed and were unable to mitigate problems
of inequality before 2002.
- A paper by Yang Du, Chinese Academy of Social
Sciences, Beijing, also corroborated the earlier
argument on the positive impact of social benefits
in affecting poverty and income distribution in
urban China. He argued that earlier, social benefits
were related to employment and therefore shocks
to the labour market and employment had meant a
withdrawal of social benefits for unemployed workers
over the nineties. Large retrenchment in the SOE
sector was a major contributor to this phenomenon.
According to the presentation (Yang Du, ”Urban poverty
and social assistance programme in China''), various
forms of social benefits were used in urban China
recently to counter these effects. The measures
included “socializing the pension system, reforming
the health care system, and establishing minimum
living standard. In addition, various temporary
measures were used to alleviate the negative impacts
of shocks on the workers’ life, such as laid-off
subsidy and lump-sum payments have been used to
relive the crisis to those SOE workers who experienced
sudden employment shocks”. The paper highlighted
the role of the ‘Dibao’ programme in China which
support the poor whose income is below poverty line.
First introduced in Shanghai, this programme benefited
the poor immensely, the paper found, though it has
left out the migrant population from its purview.
The paper finds that the programme had reasonably
good coverage as the analysis on distribution of
transfer also shows that the poorest 20% population
gets more than 80% of Dibao transfer, which means
that the implementation of the program functions
quite well.
India:
In India, too, the urban-rural scenarios presented
interesting analogies. Stagnating agricultural growth
since the mid nineties, and slow industrial growth
over the nineties had meant that the employment generation
ability of the economy had to come from the service
sector. But being skill biased, despite a high growth
of output, the service sector has been unable to absorb
displaced workers from agriculture. Non farm employment
has grown since the late nineties though real wages
fell implying an increase for profits and private
capital.
- According to Himanshu (“Growth, Employment and
Poverty Reduction: The Post Reform Indian Experience”),
both urban and rural consumption inequalities increased
sharply since the early nineties, urban more than
rural inequality. After much debate this has been
more or less conclusively established. However,
despite inequality increase and agrarian stagnation,
the period after 1999 has seen significant poverty
reduction, and this is much more in rural areas
than in urban. This the paper ascribed to lower
inflation especially in food prices and higher worker
participation rates. However, wages per worker have
grown much less during this period and this has
increased profits and allowed more private investment.
Gaps between wages and managerial emoluments also
increased sharply. Though non farm employment increased
after late nineties, employment shares show no growth
in private organised employment and a sharp decline
in agricultural wage employment. The real expansion
was in self-employment
- The paper argued that in terms of achieving sustainable
reductions in poverty, a policy shift focusing on
the growth of agriculture was a must. The growth
potential of non farm employment is limited without
driving down wages further and increasing within
urban inequalities. In addition, most of the self-employed
are in low productivity informal sector activities,
and any further increases in these sectors do not
appear sustainable.
- Another paper on India (Amitabh Kundu, “Migration
and Urbanisation in India in the Context of Poverty
Alleviation”) dwelt on the role of migration, urbanization
and the implications it had for poverty. The paper
argued that it is important to harness the potential
of migration in the context of development and poverty
alleviation. It would, therefore, make sense to
discuss measures to promote orderly migration instead
of considering proposals to discourage mobility
of population. Under a more proactive vision of
inclusive development, the provision of land for
the poor can be made within the cities, as envisaged
under Eleventh Plan document. Indeed, all concerned
international agencies should examine the possibilities
of supporting economic opportunities by providing
the migrants access to infrastructure and basic
services, besides removing discriminatory regulations
that deny migrants equal access to employment and
basic services. In addition, the pattern of urbanization
and infrastructure development must also focus on
smaller cities as these contain the highest rate
of poverty and greater deprivation in terms of quality
of life.
- The third paper on India (Smita Gupta, ‘''Significance
and limitations of India's National Rural Employment
Guarantee Programme in addressing rural poverty'')
focused specifically on the National Rural Employment
Guarantee Act (NREGPA) and examined its role in
being able to provide rural employment and alleviate
poverty. The paper received enthusiastic response
since it described the functioning of a pro-active
move on the part of the Indian government to address
questions of poverty, livelihood and imbalances.
Therefore, it could be used as a role model for
other developing economies which were grappling
with similar problems.
Other experiences:
Papers on other regions like Cuba and Vietnam highlighted
the role of social development and emphasized the
need for investments in education and health. Others
on Africa highlighted the role of strengthening state-society
interaction, and using active feedback of the society
in shaping poverty alleviation and development policies.
The Argentina case showed the need for concentrating
on more than just economic growth for attaining poverty
reduction, and concentrating on an appropriate macroeconomic
framework that could deliver more employment options.
- In Cuba (Elda Molina Diaz, “''Cuba: Economic restructuring,
recent trends and main challenges''), despite the
economic hardship brought forward by the economic
embargo, state expenditure on education, health
and social security continued to increase over the
second half of nineties and increased sharply thereafter.
Health and education were developed not only for
citizens but as export products. A major objective
of the policy planners was to create the economic
and social basis to re-launch a development program
once the crisis was over. The current policy thrust
included improvement of the free educational system
in all levels, refurbishment, expansion and retooling
of the free healthcare system and increases of wages,
pensions and social assistance. The state has also
increased investments in infrastructure.
- Another paper on Vietnam (Yukio Ikemoto, “"Poverty
alleviation policies and ethnic minority people
in Vietnam: A capability approach") highlighted
the importance of the ‘capability approach’ and
the limitations of just going by income indicators
in the policy focus on reducing poverty. This required
addressing a set of issues that builds the human
being’s capability. These can be understood in terms
of some basic indicators that an individual must
meet. Being adequately nourished, free from avoidable
disease, avoiding premature mortality, being adequately
educated, having essential non-food consumption
goods and being well-sheltered were some of these.
- The paper on Argentina (Roxana Maurizio, “Macroeconomic
regime, trade openness, unemployment and inequality:
the Argentine Experience''), argued that macroeconomic
regime matters in term of distributional and living
conditions outcomes Argentina’s poverty and income
distribution did suffer in spite of recovering from
crises. There are environments that, in spite of
producing important GDP growths, do not benefit
the employment creation and therefore contribute
to the inequality increase. Negative effects that
some macroeconomic configurations have on the labour
market and income distribution persist even after
the country returns to its growth path. Argentina
has experienced a pattern where the successive crises
worsen the income distribution as long as the recovery
cycles find boundaries for the complete reversion
of these trends. High real exchange rate alone does
not solve all labour and social problems.
- The paper on Africa (Dereje Alemayehu, ''Taming
the 'predatory' state – the major antipoverty project
in Africa'') argued that incomplete nation-building
and perennial dysfunctional state-society relationship
characterise the major political impediment to eliminate
poverty in Africa. The way forward lies in democratising
state –society relations. This included an informed
and organised participation of citizens in the political
and policy processes.
The papers highlighted a range of issues relating
to the nature and extent of poverty and income inequalities
across developing countries and provided some clear
policy guidelines. From the papers and the discussions
that followed, a set of policy prescriptions emerge
that can be included in part or whole in the policy
goals of any economy that is seeking to address basic
economic ills of persistent poverty and inequality
and meeting the MDG goals. In the current context,
these are even more imperative. The prescription policies
are also interconnected and represent not isolated
but an interdependent network of policy regime.
To summarise, the overall policy indicators would
indicate certain pathways:
- To invest in social benefits and strengthening
the social security network through the development
of not only income subsidies, but the active pursuit
of public education and health provisions. Investment
in social sectors is a must in this regard. This
could ensure the development of human potential
in the long run and therefore, long run economic
growth. Forms of direct income transfers for populations
below the poverty line could also be effective in
the short run as in the case of China.
- To build pro-poor rural institutions like credit
and agrarian infrastructure that can help mitigate
the problem of agrarian stagnation. As the cases
of India and China show, countering the problem
of agricultural stagnation was a must for attaining
sustainable reductions in poverty. Just employment
generation in the urban sector is not enough.
- Simultaneously, growth itself is not enough for
poverty reduction or for improving income distribution.
There must be active policy impulses for broad based
employment promotion. Addressing agricultural growth
issues is one of these policies. Initiating special
programmes for employment generation as done in
the case of India is an important tool in this aspect.
The broad macroeconomic framework must be pro-employment
for this to work.
- In urban areas, in-migration is an increasing
trend in developing countries. But this force could
be used effectively by improving livelihood options,
improved infrastructure and living conditions in
urban areas. This must focus not only on big cities
but on smaller cities where higher poverty tends
to be concentrated.
- Finally, the role of interaction between the
state and society and effective governance cannot
be undermined. The developmental role of the state
must be built in active coordination with the society.
Political democracy and effective governance with
state-society participation is a crucial ingredient
for the success of any anti poverty programme, and
this is especially true for regions where the state
– society networks are underdeveloped and governmental
institution may be less mature.
June
19 , 2007. |