Indonesian living standards: before and after the financial crisis.

Type Book
Title Indonesian living standards: before and after the financial crisis.
Author(s)
Publication (Day/Month/Year) 2004
Publisher Institute of Southeast Asian Studies
URL http://www.cabdirect.org/abstracts/20043195337.html;jsessionid=95EB2F7D88E5E25A9CD59BB681651BAA
Abstract
This book uses the Indonesia Family Life Surveys (IFLS) from late 1997 and late 2000 to examine changes in many different dimensions of Indonesian living standards from just before the start of the Asian financial crisis to three years after. Levels of poverty and per capita expenditure, individual subjective standards of living, employment and wages, education, health outcomes and risk factors, health input utilization, health service delivery, family planning and services, social safety net programmes, and decentralization, are examined. It is indicated that as of late 2000, almost three years after the economic crisis began, individuals in the IFLS data appear to have recovered in their living standards to the levels seen immediately prior to the crisis. This is the case for many dimensions of their standard of living, including poverty, incomes, wages, child school enrollments, child and adult health status and health care utilization, and contraception use. The book has 14 chapters and a subject index.
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