Previous studies of poverty in developing countries have to a great extent focussed on the characteristics of the household head and used these as proxies for the underlying ability of the household to generate income. This paper uses five rounds of panel data to investigate the persistence of poverty in urban Ethiopia, with a particular focus on the role of intra-household heterogeneity in occupations. Dynamic probit and system generalised method of moments regression results suggest that international remittances and labour market status of non-head household members are important determinants of households' poverty status. Results also show that controlling for these variables and the “initial conditions problem” encountered in nonlinear dynamic probit models reduces the magnitude of estimated poverty persistence significantly for urban Ethiopia. These findings have important implications for identifying the poor and formulating effective poverty reduction and targeting strategies.
Poverty Persistence and Intra-Household Heterogeneity in Occupations: Evidence from Urban Ethiopia
EfD Authors
Country
Sustainable Development Goals
Publication reference
Alem, Y. (2014). Poverty Persistence and Intra-Household Heterogeneity in Occupations: Evidence from Urban Ethiopia. Oxford Development Studies, 43(1), 20–43. https://doi.org/10.1080/13600818.2014.944123