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This workshop in Kampala, Uganda focused on poverty mapping to capture regional heterogeneity, identify factors influencing poverty, and enhance resource targeting. Learn how poverty profiles, money metrics, and household characteristics help identify and support the poor. Explore how poverty maps aid in crime analysis, resource allocation, and disease outbreak prevention. Gain insights into developing evidence-based poverty reduction strategies and monitoring progress for efficient resource utilization and regional capacity building.
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Poverty Mapping23 - 26 July 2001PARIS21 Workshop for East Africa & The Great HornKampala, Uganda
Poverty Mapping • Why • to capture heterogeneity within regions • identify geographical factors that influence poverty • improve targeting of resources and interventions • improve communication about poverty conditions • Poverty Profile • poverty maps are part of poverty profile • comprehensive poverty profile needed to balance picture
Who is poor? • 3 Common approaches • Money metric • Basic Needs • Human capabilities
Method used • Used money-metric measure as proxy for household welfare • imputed consumption expenditure (obtained by combining census & survey data) • Imputation based on readily observable household characteristics e.g. age,sex, race, household assets, access to services, educational status etc • obtained poverty rates for 3 levels of geography
Where are the poor to be found? 3 md Bloem Botshabelo Thaba Nchu
What are the major characteristics of the poor? Using Census records, the major characteristics of those identified as poor can be obtained e.g. • Demographic profile • Basic needs profile • Human capability profile • Data from other service providers eg location of schools, access to public transport, location of clinics is needed to obtain a comprehensive profile.
Using Poverty Maps • Crime analysis • socio-economic correlates of crime hot spots • Local government resource allocations • equitable shares allocation model • Cholera outbreak • working with health dept to identify communities at risk and inform health education programs
Benefits • Focus on poor as a group • Support design & development of evidence-based poverty reduction strategies • Guide to resource allocation • Tools for monitoring & evaluating progress • Opportunities for national/regional capacity building • Opportunities for service providers to offer integrated services