Can Africa Reduce Poverty by Half by 2015?
 No Thumbnail Available 
Date
2007
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Blackwell Publishing
Abstract
This study uses simulations to explore the possibility of halving the percentage of people living in extreme poverty in Africa by 2015. It is shown that initial levels of inequality and per capita consumption determine the cumulative growth and inequality reductions required to achieve the target. The study finds that on average Africa only needs a relatively modest annual rate of growth in per capita household consumption to halve poverty by 2015 if inequality remains unchanged. The trade-off between growth and changes in inequality varies greatly among countries and their policy-choices are thus quite different. In some cases small changes in income-distribution can have a large effect on poverty, while in others a strong focus on growth is the only viable option.
Description
Keywords
Poverty, pro-poor growth, millennium development goals, Africa