Author:
Anwar Talat,Qureshi Sarfraz K.
Abstract
Poverty, defined comprehensively as absence of options to
shape one’s life according to one’s own preferences, comes closer to the
concept of human development as presented in UNDP’s Human Development
Reports. Absolute poverty, on the contrary, defines poverty in terms of
satisfaction of minimum physical needs of food and non-food items to
enable people at the lower end of income distribution to engage in
economic activity. From the vantage point of the policy-maker concerned
with alleviation of poverty, it is crucial to know the magnitude of the
existing level of poverty and identify the policy determinants of
poverty as well as constraints standing in the way of an effective
attack on the worst forms of absolute poverty. In Pakistan, like many
other developing countries, poverty has emerged as a core issue on the
policy agenda. The traditional measures of poverty—headcount, severity
and poverty gap indicate that the incidence of poverty during the
previous decade have shown no sign of poverty abatement despite numerous
policy and institutional initiatives undertaken by the government. The
debate on trends in poverty during the 1990s—an era of stabilisation and
structural adjustment has been wide-ranging in Pakistan. However, there
is no consensus on the poverty outcomes from the policy and
institutional reforms. Primarily due to non-availability of basic data,
the last year for which poverty estimates are available is
1998-99.
Publisher
Pakistan Institute of Development Economics (PIDE)
Subject
Development,Geography, Planning and Development
Cited by
13 articles.
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