About Child Poverty – A Bangladesh's Perspective
Abstract
Taking child poverty into account as an enormous concern on the pathway to human development, the
present dissertation aims to examine child poverty’s extent and characteristics, poor children’s views
on this issue and their policy recommendation to reduce it.
The research questions are: 1) what are the extent and characteristics of child poverty in
Bangladesh? 2) What is child poverty? Why and how do children experience it? 3 (a) To what extent
and in what respect does child poverty differ between Bangladesh and China? 3 (b) What are the
reasons for the differences in child poverty over time between the two countries? 4 ) What is needed to
reduce child poverty in Bangladesh according to its principal victims? The present dissertation is
based on research mainly with young children aged up to 14 years.
A combination of quantitative and qualitative studies’ inclusion is a strength of this
dissertation, which further offers to look at child poverty from different perspectives. For quantitative
studies (Chapter 5 and Chapter 7), the empirical materials consist of microdata from: a) Bangladesh
HIES for the years 1995 and 2000; b) Chinese data from China Household Income Project (CHIP) of
the years 1988, 1995, and 2002. For qualitative studies (Chapter 6 and Chapter 8), data from five focus
group discussions––conducted during 2005 and 2006 with 30 participants––are used. The methods for
data analysis in quantitative studies are: i) descriptive and multivariate analysis; ii) decomposition
framework. A grounded theory approach is applied to analyse the data for qualitative studies.
Nine chapters constitute this dissertation. Chapters 1 to 4––based on secondary data––
introduce background information, theoretical discussion, methodological issues and overviews of
forthcoming chapters. Chapters 5-8 contain four empirical studies. The conclusion draws some broad
inferences in Chapter 9.
The dissertation mainly finds that Bangladesh’s children make up the greater share of the
population where almost half of the poor are children; child poverty rates are––similar to China’s––
higher than the adults’ and more extensive than in China (Chapter 5 and Chapter 7). Child poverty
plays a vital role in the prolongation of developing, expanding, extending and transmitting poverty on
to successive generations; three different interlinked stages––encompassing multidimensionality,
spending life in distress, and having intergenerational and gendered dimension––are disclosed in this
progression (Chapter 6).
Additionally, the effectiveness of growth and income inequality do affect––but not always––
child poverty differences across time and countries. Other demographic factors are revealed to play
vital roles (Chapter 7). Household head’s education demonstrates strong negative association with
child poverty (chapters 5-8).
Participants recommended a combination of policies to enhance the capability of poor
children and their caregivers (Chapter 8). Policy interventions need to give further attention to: reduce
parental poverty and income inequality, sustain economic growth, ensure access to education and
health care, expose corruption and hidden costs of these services, and eliminate mistrust of the
recipients to speed up the extent of child poverty’s reduction in Bangladesh.
Degree
Doctor of Philosophy
University
Göteborgs universitet. Samhällsvetenskapliga fakulteten
University of Gothenburg. Faculty of Social Sciences
Institution
Department of Social Work ; Institutionen för socialt arbete
Disputation
Fredagen den 1 juni 2012, kl. 09.15, hörsal Sappören, Institutionen för socialt arbete, Sprängkullsgatan 25, Göteborg.
Date of defence
2012-06-01
begum_syeda@hotmail.com
Date
2012-05-11Author
Begum, Syeda Shahanara
Keywords
Child poverty
Bangladesh
Education
Multidimensional deprvation
Intergenerational transmission of poverty
Public services
Corruption
Economic growth
Income inequality
Grounded theory approach
Publication type
Doctoral thesis
ISBN
91-86796-68-6
ISSN
1401-5781
Language
eng