Almudena Fernandez Luis Felipe Lopez-Calva UNDP Regional Bureau for Latin America and the Caribbean London, 9 November 2009 Transitory Shocks, Permanent.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
٠ 1 ٠ Global Operations Landscape Data on Target: Increase % of Children who Report Improved Level of Well-being 31.4% of population in Armenia living.
Advertisements

Wirtschaft Technologie Umwelt Vorstand Wilfried Kurtzke Answers of IG Metall to the Financial and Economic Crisis - Protection of Jobs - Stabilisation.
Copyright © 2008 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. Chapter 13 International Trade in Goods and Assets.
The Latin American and Caribbean Perspective
Regional dimension of the crisis Interactive Thematic Dialogue On the Financial and Economic Crisis and its impact on Development March 2009 Delivered.
Close to Home: The development impact of remittances in Latin America Pablo Fajnzylber and Humberto Lopez.
1 Changing Profile of Household Sector Credit and Deposits in Indian Banking System -Deepak Mathur November 30, 2010.
Overcoming Indigenous Disadvantage in Australia Gary Banks Chairman, Productivity Commission OECD WORLD FORUM Statistics, Knowledge and Policy Measuring.
INTRA-INDUSTRY TRADE AND THE SCALE EFFECTS OF ECONOMIC INTEGRATION Elisa Riihimäki Statistics Finland, Business Structures September
THE 2004 LIVING CONDITIONS MONITORING SURVEY : ZAMBIA EXTENT TO WHICH GENDER WAS INCORPORATED presented at the Global Forum on Gender Statistics, Accra.
International Labour Office 1 Expert Group Meeting Policies to advance Social Integration New York, 2-4 November 2009 Griet Cattaert – Michael Cichon Social.
Global Child Poverty Study Sierra Leone Report to the Regional Workshop in Abidjan 12 th -14 th February 2008.
HIV/AIDS Weakens the Immune System
Macroeconomic regime, trade openness, unemployment and inequality. The Argentine Experience. Roxana Maurizio Universidad Nacional de General Sarmiento.
THE COMMONWEALTH FUND Why Not the Best? Results from the National Scorecard on U.S. Health System Performance, 2011 Cathy Schoen, Senior Vice President.
1. 2 Why are Result & Impact Indicators Needed? To better understand the positive/negative results of EC aid. The main questions are: 1.What change is.
1. 2 Why are Result & Impact Indicators Needed? To better understand the positive/negative results of EC aid. The main questions are: 1.What change is.
1. 2 Why are Result & Impact Indicators Needed? To better understand the positive/negative results of EC aid. The main questions are: 1.What change is.
0 - 0.
Health Shocks, Household Consumption, and Child Nutrition Aida Galiano (University of Zaragoza) & Marcos Vera-Hernández (UCL & IFS)
The Gender Impact of Crime on Time Use and Children Development in the Colombian Rural Areas Manuel Fernández Ana María Ibáñez Ximena Peña June 4 th 2010.
1 The Social Survey ICBS Nurit Dobrin December 2010.
COUNTER-CYCLICAL PROVISIONS, ANAGERIAL DISCRETION AND LOAN GROWTH: THE CASE OF SPAIN by S. Carbó-Valverde and F. Rodríguez-Fernández João A.C. Santos Federal.
Table 12.1: Cash Flows to a Cash and Carry Trading Strategy.
401(k) Participant Behavior in a Volatile Economy Prepared for the 14 th Annual RRC Conference, August 2, 2012 by Barbara Butrica and Karen Smith 1.
Measuring the Economy’s Performance
5-1 The Goods Market and the IS Relation
Ana Marr, University of Greenwich, London, UK Julian Schmied, Potsdam University, Germany Third European Research Conference on Microfinance, Norway, June.
Tertiary Education The State of Education Series March 2013 A Global Report.
Migration, remittances, and development indicators: The economic pillar Ben Slay Team leader, regional poverty reduction practice UNDP—Europe and Central.
Evaluation of demand-side incentives to improve education and health outcomes: Evidence from past and ongoing randomized interventions in Burkina Faso.
Population and Poverty
Impact Measurement and Ubora March 2011 Nairobi. Data + Learning + Action = Improvement What is Ubora? Quality Performance PROGRAM PROGRAM SUPPORT IMPACT.
Profiles of the Adolescents and Youths in Bangladesh Syeda Sitwat Shahed Narayan Das Research and Evaluation Division, BRAC 7 February, 2012.
Turkish Economy “Recent developments” Ekrem Keskin November 2008.
Copyright © 2006 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. Chapter 2 Comparative Development: Differences and Commonalities among Developing Countries.
United Nations Population Division, Demographic dynamics of youth POPULATION DIVISION DESA.
Copyright © 2008 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. Chapter 12 Keynesian Business Cycle Theory: Sticky Wages and Prices.
1 School of Oriental & African Studies Reducing Food Price Volatility for Food Security & Development: G20 Action December 2010 Andrew Dorward Centre for.
A Real Intertemporal Model with Investment
Is Gender Disparity in Child Care Declining in India? A Comparison of two National Family Health Surveys Parveen Nangia (Social Planning Council, Sudbury)
Diverse Children: Race, Ethnicity, and Immigration in America’s New Non-Majority Generation by Donald J. Hernandez, Ph.D. Hunter College, City University.
HEALTH EQUITY: THE INDIAN CONTEXT Subodh S Gupta.
THE PERMANENT EFFECTS OF RECESSIONS ON CHILD HEALTH: EVIDENCE FROM PERU Jorge AgüeroMartín Valdivia UC at RiversideGRADE, Peru XIV Meetings of the LACEA/
Chapter 6 Population Growth and Economic Development: Causes, Consequences, and Controversies.
Migration, Poverty and Human Development Luis F. Lopez-Calva UNDP, Latin America and the Caribbean.
THE EFFECT OF INCOME SHOCKS ON CHILD LABOR AND CCTs AS AN INSURANCE MECHANISM FOR SCHOOLING Monica Ospina Universidad EAFIT, Medellin Colombia.
1 The Impact of the Financial Crisis on Inequality and Poverty in Latin America LAGO Working Group November 3, 2010 Nora Lustig Samuel Z. Stone Professor.
1 Current Account. 2 Issues and Applications Global capital markets and the current account Debt crisis in developing countries Sovereign risk.
CARICOM THE MILLENIUM DEVELOPMENT GOALS (MDG). CARICOM BACKGROUNDBACKGROUND ► GOALS AND TARGETS WHICH ARE: TIME- BOUND AND MEASUREABLE BOUND AND MEASUREABLE.
Figure 1. Private Returns to Educating Females are High at All Levels Percent return 20% 15% 10% 5% 0% Primary SecondaryHigher Averages from country studies.
United Nations Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (UNECLAC) Disasters Lessons Learned and Impact on Recovery and Reconstruction University.
Lecture 12: The Equilibrium Business Cycle Model L11200 Introduction to Macroeconomics 2009/10 Reading: Barro Ch.8 18 February 2010.
In Times of Crisis: Protecting the Vulnerable and Investing in Children Gaspar Fajth UNICEF Policy and Practice New York 6 February, 2009.
Permanent effects of economic crises on household welfare: Evidence and projections from Argentina’s downturns Guillermo Cruces Pablo Gluzmann CEDLAS –
Millennium Development Goals Uruguay vs. Tobago Created by: Talon Sweeten & Mandy Nelson.
HOW CAN SOCIAL SECURITY SCHEMES BE DESIGNED FOR LOW-INCOME COUNTRIES TO EFFECTIVELY PROVIDE FOR THE POOREST? Presentation to the International Conference”
Remittances and competitiveness: Evidence for Latin America Migration and Development Thematic Group Seminar Humberto Lopez November 26, 2006 Presentation.
Reproductive Health and Poverty Reduction: What Do (can, might, don’t)We Know? Tom Merrick Hewlett/PRB London Research Conference ~ November, 2006.
Policy response to face the international crisis en Latin America Andrés Marinakis, ILO Cartagena, October 19, 2009.
The Social Protection Challenge in Middle income Countries
6.2 Population Growth: Past, Present, and Future
Session 3: International experience: Impact of social protection programs Puja Vasudeva Dutta World Bank.
PROVIDING INTERNATIONAL COMPARABILITY OF POVERTY ASSESSMENTS
Population Growth and Economic Development: Causes, Consequences, and Controversies Lecture 5 1.
Macro Crises and Safety Nets
Transitory Shocks, Permanent Effects: Impact of the Economic Crisis on the Well-Being of Households in Latin America and the Caribbean Almudena Fernandez.
Promoting Gender Equality and Empowerment of Women
Evolution of Poverty Rates and GDP Per Capita. LAC Poverty Rates Poverty headcount ratio at $5.50 a day (2011 PPP) GDP Per Capita (current US$) Evolution.
Presentation transcript:

Almudena Fernandez Luis Felipe Lopez-Calva UNDP Regional Bureau for Latin America and the Caribbean London, 9 November 2009 Transitory Shocks, Permanent Effects: Impact of the Economic Crisis on the Well-Being of Households in Latin America and the Caribbean

Content 2 1. Objective 2. Conceptual Framework 3. Methodology 4. Empirical Evidence 5. Final Remarks

Objective 3 Results from the project The Effects of the Economic Crisis on Households Well-being in Latin America and the Caribbean conducted by UNDPs Regional Bureau for Latin America and the Caribbean. Aims to understand how transitory macroeconomic downturns have permanent effects on households well- being in Latin America and the Caribbean, as measured by various social indicators. Developed a methodology to measure the effects of past crises on health, education and poverty and hired local teams to implement it in five countries

Conceptual Framework 4 Crises affect the well-being of households in the long-term depending on how they affect their stock or accumulations of income-generating assets 1. Economic crises can: decrease the stock of income-generating assets held by households (using savings, selling physical assets); decrease the rate at which assets are used (unemployment); decrease the market value of assets (wages, prices); affect the accumulation of income-generating assets for future generations (education, health). 1 Attanasio, Orazio and Miguel Szekely (1999)

Conceptual Framework II 5 How much households choose to reduce their income- generating assets depends on 1 : Income effects Substitution effects Heterogeneity according to household characteristics Which of these effects dominates determines the extent to which households forgo future consumption vis-á-vis current consumption. 1 Ferreira, F. and N. Schady (2008)

Methodology 6 The empirical analysis was conducted using data from past crises, and various methodologies: difference-in-difference fixed effects instrumental variables Economic crisis were defined as an aggregate negative economic shock characterized by a sharp decline of the GDP per capita. Outcomes of interest: health, education, and poverty and which is studied in each country depends on the availability of data at the country level.

Empirical Evidence: Poverty 7

8 A look at the data hints at poverty increases during economic downturns. Evolution of Poverty in ArgentinaPoverty and GDP Per Capital in LAC

9 CountryIndicatorResults Argentina Overall poverty A one percent decrease in per capita GDP is associated with an increase in poverty of 0.24 percentage points. Child poverty A one percent decrease in per capita GDP is associated with an increase in child poverty of 0.42 percentage points. When times of growth and contraction are differentiated a one percent decrease in GDP is significantly associated with an increase in child poverty by 0.44 percentage points while a one percent increase in per capita GDP is significantly associated with a reduction in child poverty by 0.40 percentage points. Brazil Overall Poverty A one percent decrease in GDP is associated with an increase in poverty by percentage points.

Empirical Evidence: Health 10

11 CountryIndicatorResults Mexico Child mortality For children up to one year of age, a one percent decrease in GDP is significantly associated with an increase of 1.97 female deaths and 2.58 male deaths per thousand live births. When taking account the population at risk this implies 640 additional deaths for this age group for every one percent decrease in GDP. Total Mortality A one percent decrease in GDP is significantly associated with an increase of female deaths and male deaths for every hundred thousand in the population. This implies 2,381 additional deaths per hundred thousand in the population for every one percent decrease in GDP. Peru Child mortality A one percent decrease in GDP per capita is associated with an increase in child mortality of 0.27 deaths per thousand live births. This implies an elasticity of mortality for children of These effects vary significantly according to mother education levels and do not vary significantly when distinguished by gender.

12 CountryIndicatorResults Argentina Maternal mortality A one percent decrease in per capita GDP is associated with an increase of 0.33 deaths per 10,000 live births. Child mortality A one percent decrease in per capita GDP is associated with an increase of 0.41 deaths per 10,000 live births. When growth and contraction periods are differentiated, a one percent decrease in GDP is significantly associated with an increase in child mortality by 1.1 deaths per 10,000 live births while a one percent increase in per capita GDP is not significantly associated with a reduction in child mortality.

Empirical Evidence: Education 13

CountryIndicatorResults Brazil School delay (7-14) Boys that attended school during a crisis episode were 9 percentage points more likely to be delayed in school by at least one year than those that attended school before/after crisis. Girls that attended school during a crisis episode were 6.9 percentage points more likely to be delayed in school by at least one year than those that attended school before/after crisis. School enrollment (7-14) Boys that were between 7 and 14 years of age during a crisis episode were 11.5 percentage points more likely to be enrolled in school than those in the same age group before/after crisis. Girls that were between 7 and 14 years of age during a crisis episode were 11.4 percentage points more likely to be enrolled in school than those in the same age group before/after crisis. Jamaica Primary school attendance A one percent decrease in GDP per capita growth rate is strongly associated with a 1.45 percentage point increase in primary school attendance, although results are not significant when growth rates are instrumented. Secondary school attendance A one percentage point decrease in GDP per capita growth rate is strongly associated with a 1.48 percentage point increase in primary school attendance, although results are not significant when growth rates are instrumented. 14

Summary of Results 15 ArgentinaBrazilJamaicaMexicoPeru POVERTY Overall Poverty (-) Child Poverty (-) EDUCATION Enrollment PrimaryAmbigous (+) 1 Enrollment secondaryAmbigous (-) Attendance primary (+)(-) Attendance secondary (-) School delay primary (-) School delay secondary (-) HEALTH Child mortality (-) Maternal mortality (-) (-) 2 Total mortality (-) HAZ (+) Illness Rate (-) 1 Using lagged growth rates 2 Using prenatal care as proxy Entries in red are statistically significant.

Final Remarks 16 Economic downturns have significant impacts in long-term households well-being. In all countries studied, economic downturns have a negative impact on child mortality or child health. For those countries in which the effects of the crises on poverty are examined, there is also strong evidence that recessions are associated with increases in child and overall poverty. Results on education are ambiguous.

17 Policies to mitigate the effects of crises should move beyond programs to establish a comprehensive social protection system that protects the income of households during economic downturns. Maintain or expand the provision of public services, mainly education and health Provide incentives that prevent reversals in asset accumulation in order to reduce the vulnerability of households well-being to temporary shocks.

Almudena Fernandez Luis Felipe Lopez-Calva London, 9 November 2009 Transitory Shocks, Permanent Effects: Impact of the Economic Crisis on the Well-Being of Households in Latin America and the Caribbean