The Recent Growth Resurgence in Africa and Poverty Reduction: The Context and Evidence
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Journal of African Economies
Abstract
While economic growth in Africa has resurged substantially since the mid-to-late
In the 1990s, the amount of poverty reduction seems much less spectacular. Building on
other studies, the paper explores the translation of the recent growth to poverty reduction using 1985–2013 PovcalNet (World Bank) data. It assesses the relative abilities of
various panel-data methodologies to predict poverty changes based on income inequality decompositions. Surprisingly, SYSGMM performs substantially worse than
Fixed Effects and Random Effects. The analysis is conducted for both the $1.25 and
$2.00 poverty lines, and for the ‘spread’ and ‘depth’ of poverty, as well as for the usual
popular measure, the headcount ratio. Although income growth appears to be the
main force behind poverty reduction in Africa, the decomposition reveals striking differences, across countries and poverty measures, concerning the relative roles of
inequality and income
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Research Article