Poverty persistence and transitions in Uganda: A combined qualitative and quantitative analysis

Type Journal Article - The Journal of Development Studies
Title Poverty persistence and transitions in Uganda: A combined qualitative and quantitative analysis
Author(s)
Volume 42
Issue 7
Publication (Day/Month/Year) 2006
Page numbers 1225-1251
URL http://www.csp.trentu.ca/ids/documents/Q2_WP23_Lawson_et.al.pdf
Abstract
Uganda’s excellent record in reducing the national incidence of monetary poverty
over the 1990s is widely known. However, longitudinal household survey data reveal
that this net aggregate reduction was accompanied by substantial mobility into as well
as out of poverty [Okidi and McKay, 2003]. A majority of those that were poor in
1992 had escaped by 1999, but a substantial minority were left behind and many
others fell into poverty. Against a background of strong macroeconomic performance
in Uganda over this decade, there was a significant variation in individual experiences
of poverty movements, and it is important to understand the factors, many of which
are individual or local, that contributed to this

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