Author:
Arif G. M.,Nazli Hina,Haq Rashida
Abstract
There is ample evidence that poverty, which declined rapidly
in Pakistan in the 1980s, has returned in the 1990s [Amjad and Kemal
(1997); Ali and Tahir (1999); Jafri (1999); Qureshi and Arif (2001)].
Consequently large number of Pakistanis, more than one-third of the
total population, live currently far below what can reasonably be
regarded as a decent standard of living. Poverty has generally been
higher in rural areas than in urban areas. This gap could not be bridged
overtime; still the greatest degree of poverty is found in the
countryside. To address rural poverty, policy-makers have long been
looking to the growth potential of the farm sector of the rural economy.
Non-agricultural activities in rural areas have received little
attention. This neglect, however, may be socially costly. It has been
shown in several recent empirical studies that nonfarm activities occupy
an important place in rural economies throughout the developing world
[Hazell and Haggblade (1993); Adams and He (1995); Bakht (1996); Sen
(1996); Lanjouw (1999)]. They expand quite rapidly in response to
agriculture development, and therefore merit special attention in the
design of strategies concerning poverty alleviation in rural
areas.
Publisher
Pakistan Institute of Development Economics (PIDE)
Subject
Development,Geography, Planning and Development
Cited by
22 articles.
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