household income and expenditure survey (hies) 2010 – implications for extreme poverty research

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HOUSEHOLD INCOME AND EXPENDITURE SURVEY (HIES) 2010 – IMPLICATIONS FOR EXTREME POVERTY RESEARCH

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Household Income and Expenditure Survey (HIES) 2010 – Implications for Extreme Poverty Research. The findings of the Household Income and Expenditure Survey (HIES) 2010 will provide the key (but not the only) benchmark or reference point for poverty related research until 2016. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Household Income and Expenditure Survey (HIES) 2010 – Implications for Extreme Poverty Research

HOUSEHOLD INCOME AND EXPENDITURE SURVEY (HIES) 2010 – IMPLICATIONS FOR EXTREME POVERTY RESEARCH

Page 2: Household Income and Expenditure Survey (HIES) 2010 – Implications for Extreme Poverty Research

The findings of the Household Income and Expenditure Survey (HIES) 2010 will provide the key (but not the only) benchmark or reference point for poverty related research until 2016.

A few headlines from the preliminary report

(see BBS website)

Page 3: Household Income and Expenditure Survey (HIES) 2010 – Implications for Extreme Poverty Research

Steeply Declining incidence of poverty between 2005 and 2010 Upper Poverty Line – from 40% to 31.5%

national rate

Lower Poverty Line – from 25.1% to 17.6% national rate

Lower Poverty line

2005 2010

Rural 28.6% 21.1%

Urban 14.6% 7.7%

Page 4: Household Income and Expenditure Survey (HIES) 2010 – Implications for Extreme Poverty Research

Increasing food intakes

5.5% increase from 2005 nationally

6.21% increase rural 3.5% increase urban

Decline in rice(439.4g to 416.10g) Increase in wheat (12.08 to 26.09) and

potato Increase in meat, veg – and protein

Page 5: Household Income and Expenditure Survey (HIES) 2010 – Implications for Extreme Poverty Research

Slight decline in inequality of income distribution

Gini co-eficient decreased slightly (0.458 from 0.467)

But share of income of bottom 50% of the population remained at 20.33%

Bottom decile gets 2% of income

Page 6: Household Income and Expenditure Survey (HIES) 2010 – Implications for Extreme Poverty Research

Important contribution from remittances Remittance receiving households have

82% higher income. Only 13.1% of remittance receiving households are below the, upper, poverty line (17% in 2005).

Page 7: Household Income and Expenditure Survey (HIES) 2010 – Implications for Extreme Poverty Research

Average size of households continues to decline From 4.84 (2005) to 4.5(2010)

Rural from 4.88 (2005) to 4.53

Urban from 4.72 (2005) to 4.41

Page 8: Household Income and Expenditure Survey (HIES) 2010 – Implications for Extreme Poverty Research

Access to education increasing Literacy rate up to 57.9% from 51.9%

(2005)

Enrolment rate for girls exceeds boys in rural and urban areas.

Page 9: Household Income and Expenditure Survey (HIES) 2010 – Implications for Extreme Poverty Research

Access to Safety Nets increasing 24.57% reported receiving benefit within

the last 12 months (only 13.3% in 2005)

“The findings further affirm that SSNPs are reasonably well targetted”

- Poverty incidence of SSN beneficiaries is 43.4% (compared to 27.5% overall)

- But some big regional variations in % of HH receiving benefits Khulna 37.30% of HH – Rajshahi 20.66%

Page 10: Household Income and Expenditure Survey (HIES) 2010 – Implications for Extreme Poverty Research

Other important findings

Microfinance Regional distribution Community characteristics (Mouza level) Migration Crisis incidence and coping Disability Incidence Poverty by occupation Poverty by land-holdingand others

Page 11: Household Income and Expenditure Survey (HIES) 2010 – Implications for Extreme Poverty Research

The 2010 HIES report is generally good news Sharply declining poverty

Improvements across other indicators

Progress towards MDGs

But, depending on population data, over 25 million people still below the lower poverty line.

Page 12: Household Income and Expenditure Survey (HIES) 2010 – Implications for Extreme Poverty Research

The HIES represents a “State of Poverty in Bangladesh” report

Shiree is planning to produce a “State of Extreme Poverty in Bangladesh” report.

Page 13: Household Income and Expenditure Survey (HIES) 2010 – Implications for Extreme Poverty Research

Group Exercise : just a 15 minute brainstorm For a State of Extreme Poverty in

Bangladesh Report- start to draft a contents page

What are the most critical things that must be included and why?

Does the research data already exist to allow these sections to be written – if so where?

Page 14: Household Income and Expenditure Survey (HIES) 2010 – Implications for Extreme Poverty Research

State of Extreme Poverty ReportDraft Contents Page

Section One . Extreme Poverty in Bangladesh: Characteristics, Trends and Dynamics

1.1 What do we mean by extreme poverty?

1.2 Poverty thresholds analysis

1.3 Spatial Dimensions of Extreme Poverty

Section Two. Extreme Poverty; Findings and Case Studies

2.1 Characteristics of 70,000 Extreme poor Households, shiree baseline analysis (CMS1 analysis)

2.2 Ascents and descents (analysis of CMS5 data)

2.3 Extreme Poverty and Nutrition – the relationship

2.4 “Protecting the gains”: summary analysis of Rd 1 research papers

Section Three. Working with programmes

3.1 Targeting the extreme poor

3.2 Lessons from programme interventions