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Michael Epprecht Centre for Development and Environment CDE University of Bern, Switzerland Targeting poverty in the Lao PDR: how well do current approaches reach the poor? September 1 – 4, 2013 Chulalongkorn University, Bangkok, Thailand

Michael Epprecht Centre for Development and Environment CDE University of Bern, Switzerland

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September 1 – 4, 2013 Chulalongkorn University, Bangkok, Thailand. Targeting poverty in the Lao PDR : how well do current approaches reach the poor?. Michael Epprecht Centre for Development and Environment CDE University of Bern, Switzerland. Background of the SAE in the Lao PDR - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Michael Epprecht Centre for Development and Environment CDE University of Bern, Switzerland

Michael Epprecht

Centre for Development and Environment CDEUniversity of Bern, Switzerland

Targeting poverty in the Lao PDR:how well do current approaches reach the poor?

September 1 – 4, 2013

Chulalongkorn University, Bangkok, Thailand

Page 2: Michael Epprecht Centre for Development and Environment CDE University of Bern, Switzerland

OU

TLINE

► Background of the SAE in the Lao PDR

► Results of the Lao poverty mapping analysis

► Implications for targeting

Page 3: Michael Epprecht Centre for Development and Environment CDE University of Bern, Switzerland

BA

CK

GR

OU

ND

Mapping Poverty in the Lao PDR

Small-area estimation analysis using

Lao Expenditure and Consumption Survey 2003

(LECS III) 8092 households (20% urban)

in 540 villages (5%)

Population and Housing Census 2005

Systematic sample of 75% of households:

712,900 households 4,123,988 individuals

Page 4: Michael Epprecht Centre for Development and Environment CDE University of Bern, Switzerland

BA

CK

GR

OU

ND

Rural Urban X X X X X X. X X X X . .

X X X

X. X .

X X X X. X X X X X X X X

• Household size• Household size squared• Age composition of household • Female-headed household .• Education of head • Education of spouse• Occupation of head • Ethnicity .• Type of floor• Type of wall• Type of roof• Area of house . • Type of water source• Type of toilet• Type of cooking energy• Village cooking energy .• Village floor type• Village ethnicity• Agro-ecological region

SAE poverty mapping model applied in Lao PDR

Page 5: Michael Epprecht Centre for Development and Environment CDE University of Bern, Switzerland

RE

SU

LTS

► Lao poverty mapping analysis

Reliability of results

Where are the poor?

Who are the poor?

Page 6: Michael Epprecht Centre for Development and Environment CDE University of Bern, Switzerland

► Poverty estimates and confidence intervalsR

ES

ULTS

- RE

LIAB

ILITY0

.2.4

.6.8

1P

over

ty ra

tes

and

conf

iden

ce in

terv

als

District

0.2

.4.6

.81

Pov

erty

rate

s an

d co

nfid

ence

inte

rval

s

Villages

Page 7: Michael Epprecht Centre for Development and Environment CDE University of Bern, Switzerland

050

010

00Fr

eque

ncy

0 200 400 600 800# of sample households per village

► Size of Lao villages (75% sample)R

ES

ULTS

- RE

LIAB

ILITY

Page 8: Michael Epprecht Centre for Development and Environment CDE University of Bern, Switzerland

RE

SU

LTSW

HER

E A

RE

THE

PO

OR

?Poverty rates arehighest in the South East along the mountainous border with Vietnam

Rural poverty is low in

• Xayaburi Province:high value agric. for export

• Mekong corridor:irrigated rice and trade with Thailand

• Boloven plateau:fertile basaltic soils - coffee, tea, & cardamom

► Spatial patterns of poverty in the Lao PDR

Page 9: Michael Epprecht Centre for Development and Environment CDE University of Bern, Switzerland

► Spatial patterns of poverty in the Lao PDRPoverty incidence and poverty density

Page 10: Michael Epprecht Centre for Development and Environment CDE University of Bern, Switzerland

RE

SU

LTSW

HO

AR

E TH

E P

OO

R?

► Lao poverty mapping analysis

Where are the poor?

Who are the poor?

Page 11: Michael Epprecht Centre for Development and Environment CDE University of Bern, Switzerland

Poverty rates amongmale- and female-headed households:

Page 12: Michael Epprecht Centre for Development and Environment CDE University of Bern, Switzerland

RE

SU

LTSW

HO

AR

E TH

E P

OO

R?

► Poverty among ethnic groups

Page 13: Michael Epprecht Centre for Development and Environment CDE University of Bern, Switzerland

RE

SU

LTSW

HO

AR

E TH

E P

OO

R?

► Poverty among ethnic groups

Page 14: Michael Epprecht Centre for Development and Environment CDE University of Bern, Switzerland

With the poor a bit of everywhere:

IMP

LICATIO

NS

FOR

TA

RG

ETIN

G

Page 15: Michael Epprecht Centre for Development and Environment CDE University of Bern, Switzerland

IMP

LICATIO

NS

FOR

TA

RG

ETIN

G

With the poor a bit of everywhere:

?► What are the

implications…

…for targeting of poverty alleviation efforts?

Page 16: Michael Epprecht Centre for Development and Environment CDE University of Bern, Switzerland

IMP

LICATIO

NS

FOR

TAR

GE

TING

► Where to reach the poor?

Page 17: Michael Epprecht Centre for Development and Environment CDE University of Bern, Switzerland

IMP

LICATIO

NS

FOR

TA

RG

ETIN

G► MDG 1: Reducing the number of poor people

by 50 % in 2015

50% of the poor live in districts classified as not poor

1/3 of the poor live in poor priority districts

Page 18: Michael Epprecht Centre for Development and Environment CDE University of Bern, Switzerland

Highest poverty density Poorest areas

► MDG 1: Reducing Laos’ number of poor by 50%IM

PLIC

ATION

S FO

R

TAR

GE

TING

Page 19: Michael Epprecht Centre for Development and Environment CDE University of Bern, Switzerland

► Most people are poor in remote, and sparsely

populated areas

high ‘access’ costs per person

costly service provision

little potential ‘leakage’ to non-poor

IMP

LICATIO

NS

FOR

TA

RG

ETIN

G

► Most poor people live in comparatively

densely populated areas

low ‘physical access’ costs per person, but

potentially higher targeting costs

cheaper service provision

high ‘leakage’ to non-poor

Page 20: Michael Epprecht Centre for Development and Environment CDE University of Bern, Switzerland

► Balancing targeting (and implementation) costs vs. ‘leakage’

► Considerations on type of assistance in targeting(household vs. community/ geographic)

► Data needs, and updatability of key data

► Regional development approach in sparsely populated poor remote areas

► Household or population segment targeting in densely populated areas

IMP

LICATIO

NS

FOR

TA

RG

ETIN

G

Page 21: Michael Epprecht Centre for Development and Environment CDE University of Bern, Switzerland