Why growth is not enough: Household poverty dynamics in Northeast Gujarat, India
- 1 October 2005
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in The Journal of Development Studies
- Vol. 41 (7) , 1163-1192
- https://doi.org/10.1080/00220380500170865
Abstract
Despite high growth rates in Gujarat, exceeding 9 per cent per year over the decade of the 1990s, poverty in 36 villages located in the northeastern part of this state has changed hardly at all. In these villages, 9.5 per cent of households escaped from poverty over the past 25 years, but 6.3 per cent of households became poor at the same time. Escape and descent are not symmetric: different reasons account for escaping poverty than those for declining into poverty. Growth alone is hardly sufficient to achieve poverty reduction on any significant scale. Public policies will be needed to address directly the separate causes for descent into poverty.Keywords
This publication has 14 references indexed in Scilit:
- Escaping Poverty and Becoming Poor in 20 Kenyan VillagesJournal of Human Development, 2004
- Escaping Poverty and Becoming Poor: Who Gains, Who Loses, and Why?World Development, 2004
- Structural and Behavioural Characteristics of Informal Service Employment: Evidence from a Survey in New DelhiThe Journal of Development Studies, 2003
- Chronic and Transitory Poverty: Evidence from Egypt, 1997–99World Development, 2003
- Being Poor and Becoming Poor: Poverty Status and Poverty Transitions in Rural PakistanJournal of Asian and African Studies, 2002
- Measuring Household Livelihood Security at the Family and Community Level in the Developing WorldWorld Development, 2002
- GROWTH AND HUMAN DEVELOPMENT: COMPARATIVE LATIN AMERICAN EXPERIENCEThe Developing Economies, 2001
- Growth, Inequality and Poverty: Looking Beyond AveragesWorld Development, 2001
- Escaping poverty: behind the numbersPublic Administration and Development, 2001
- Why Some of the Poor Get Richer: Economic Change and Mobility in Rural Western India [and Comments]Current Anthropology, 1979