Paper

Pathways Out of and Into Poverty in 36 Villages of Andhra Pradesh, India

A search for the most effective methods to measure poverty
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This paper studies poverty and the movements in and out of poverty in 36 villages of Andhra Pradesh, India. It states that:

  • While fourteen percent of households in 36 villages of three districts in Andhra Pradesh escaped from poverty for over the past 25 years;
  • Another 12% of these households fell into poverty during the same time;
  • Escaping poverty and falling into poverty are responsive to different set of factors;
  • They require different sets of policies: one set to assist escape and another to prevent descent;
  • While ill health and high health care costs, social and customary expenses, high-interest-private-debt, and drought are associated most often with falling into poverty;
  • Diversification of income sources and land improvement are most closely related with escape;
  • Other factors, including industrial growth and education, have had only very slight and indirect effects on poverty in these villages.

The study uses a "Stages-of-Progress" method to:

  • Present results in terms of households escaping poverty and households falling into poverty;
  • Look at reasons associated with falling into poverty and escaping poverty;
  • Present policy implications that emerge form the analysis.

The study concludes that:

  • "Poverty monitoring stations" can help track the trends and causes associated with movements in both directions within any particular region;
  • Using a combination of methods, including household surveys, and participatory poverty assessments can help enhance the utility of each method.

About this Publication

By Krishna, A.
Published