Format:
1 Online-Ressource
Edition:
Online-Ausg Also available in print
Series Statement:
Policy research working paper 3503
Content:
"The immediate welfare costs of an economywide crisis can be high, but are there also lasting impacts? And are they greater in some geographic areas than others? Ravallion and Lokshin study Indonesia's severe financial crisis of 1998. They use 10 national surveys spanning 1993--2002, each covering 200,000 randomly sampled households, to estimate the impacts on mean consumption and the incidence of poverty across each of 260 districts. Counterfactual analyses indicate geographically diverse impacts years after the crisis. Proportionate impacts on the poverty rate were greater in initially better off and less unequal areas. In the aggregate, a large share--possibly the majority--of those Indonesians who were still poor in 2002 would not have been so without the 1998 crisis. This paper--a product of the Poverty Team, Development Research Group--is part of a larger effort in the group to assess the social impacts of economywide crises"--World Bank web site
Note:
Includes bibliographical references
,
Title from PDF file as viewed on 1/28/2005
Additional Edition:
Lokshin, Michael Lasting local impacts of an economywide crisis
Language:
English
URL:
Volltext
(URL des Erstveröffentlichers)