Reduccion de la pobreza a escala mundial : aprendizaje e innovacion al servicio del desarrollo Reduire la pauvrete a l'echelle mondiale : le savoir et l'innovation au service du developpement
Author(s)
Moreno-Dodson, BlancaContributor(s)
Moreno-Dodson, BlancaKeywords
POVERTY REDUCTION STRATEGYPOVERTY REDUCTION PROGRAMS
DEVELOPED COUNTRIES
POVERTY INITIATIVES
TARGETING
FOOD POLICY
INCOME COUNTRIES
POLICY REFORMS
GDP
INDEPENDENT MONITORING
DEVELOPMENT GOALS
IMPACT ON POVERTY
SOCIAL INCLUSION
SUBSIDIARY
DEVELOPMENT PRACTITIONERS
EXTERNAL FACTORS
MICROCREDITS
COUNTRY OWNERSHIP
POOR
COMMERCIAL BANKS
ANALYTICAL WORK
COMMUNITY PARTICIPATION
TECHNICAL SUPPORT
BUDGET DEFICITS
POLICY MAKERS
FREE PRIMARY
PRIMARY HEALTH CARE
YOUNG PEOPLE
PRIVATE PROPERTY
RESOURCE MOBILIZATION
GLOBAL AGENDA
INVESTMENT CLIMATE
CHILD MORTALITY
PRODUCTIVITY
CIVIL SOCIETY
INTERVENTION
LOCAL GOVERNMENTS
GENDER DISPARITY
PROJECT MANAGEMENT
LEARNING
DEVELOPMENT PROGRAM
LEARNING PROCESS
LOW-INCOME COUNTRIES
ACCESS TO MARKETS
LANDLOCKED COUNTRIES
SOUTH AMERICA
GLOBAL PARTNERSHIP
QUALITATIVE EVALUATION
SUSTAINABILITY
CONFLICT
HEALTH CENTER
LONG TERM
PURCHASING POWER
TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE
IMPACT EVALUATION
POOR PEOPLE
POOR POPULATIONS
DEVELOPMENT PARTNERS
GENDER EQUALITY
HEALTH ISSUES
EXTREMELY POOR PEOPLE
POVERTY ALLEVIATION
DEVELOPMENT PROGRAMME
REDUCING POVERTY
SAVINGS
DEVELOPING WORLD
SOCIAL SERVICES
PUBLIC SERVICES
EXPENDITURES
PURCHASING POWER PARITY
URBAN AREAS
EMPOWERMENT
LIVING STANDARDS
CONCEPTUAL FRAMEWORK
POVERTY DECLINE
PARTNER INSTITUTIONS
SERVICE PROVIDERS
CASE STUDY
POOR COUNTRIES
AGRARIAN REFORM
MICROFINANCE INSTITUTIONS
RURAL AREAS
DEVELOPMENT EFFORTS
LEGAL FRAMEWORK
SCHOOLS
FISHERIES
COUNTRY LEVEL
BASIC NEEDS
ABSOLUTE POVERTY
WAR
BENEFICIARIES
POVERTY REDUCTION PROJECT
SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT
PRIMARY EDUCATION
DRINKING WATER
WATERSHED
GEOGRAPHICAL AREAS
COMPULSORY EDUCATION
GOOD GOVERNANCE
INCOME
AGRICULTURE
DEBT
NONGOVERNMENTAL ORGANIZATIONS
URBAN POVERTY
FINANCIAL SERVICES
INSTITUTIONAL CAPACITY
RURAL HEALTH
RURAL DEVELOPMENT
RESEARCH INSTITUTE
ENVIRONMENTAL RESOURCES
EGS
SOCIAL FUNDS
COUNTERFACTUAL
NGO
FARMERS
NUTRITION
DEVELOPMENT PROGRAMS
DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
SOCIAL PROTECTION
DEVELOPMENT REPORT
TENANCY
POVERTY REDUCTION
GLOBAL INTEREST
SECONDARY EDUCATION
HEAVILY INDEBTED POOR COUNTRIES
RURAL
POLITICAL ECONOMY
CASE STUDIES
AGRICULTURAL SUBSIDIES
HIPC
POVERTY REDUCTION EFFORTS
GIRLS
POOR MEN
ENVIRONMENTAL
FOOD POLICY RESEARCH
EXTREME POVERTY
DPIP
MICROFINANCE
CHARITY
ECONOMIC GROWTH
SOCIAL DEVELOPMENT
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Show full item recordOnline Access
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/7211Abstract
Capturing the findings from the Shanghai Global Learning Initiative, Reducing Poverty on a Global Scale attempts to contribute to the broader existing knowledge on poverty reduction and the effectiveness of aid. The objective is to enlighten development practitioners about observed achievements towards reducing poverty and the factors behind them. Each of the chapters extracts implementation lessons learnt from a subset of case studies prepared along different poverty dimensions, focusing on such factors as the role of commitment and leadership, institutional innovation, learning and experimentation, and external catalysts. Instead of recommending particular solutions or best practices, the book distills key findings from the strategically selected examples and weaves them into a topical narrative.Date
2012-06-06Identifier
oai:openknowledge.worldbank.org:10986/7211http://hdl.handle.net/10986/7211
978-0-8213-6362-1
Copyright/License
CC BY 3.0 UnportedRelated items
Showing items related by title, author, creator and subject.
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The Poverty Focus of Country ProgramsIndependent Evaluation Group (World Bank, Washington, DC, 2015-07)The World Bank Group in 2013 made the elimination of extreme poverty by 2030 a central institutional focus and purpose. This evaluation examines how, and how well, the Bank Group has focused its support on poverty reduction over the past decade, and what lessons to draw from this moving forward. The lessons aim to strengthen the Bank’s country diagnostics, improve the design of country strategies, and build greater learning opportunities from program experience. Using country case studies, surveys, focus group meetings, systematic reviews of Bank products, and other instruments, the evaluation examines the consistency of poverty focus in each of four links in a causal chain: data, diagnostics, strategy formulation, and strategy implementation through lending and nonlending instruments. It reviews the adequacy of the information base and usefulness of the analytical underpinnings that support country strategy formulation and implementation. It also evaluates the consistency of the poverty focus throughout the evaluation chain and the strength and weakness of feedback loops.
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China - From Poor Areas to Poor People : China’s Evolving Poverty Reduction Agenda - An Assessment of Poverty and Inequality in ChinaWorld Bank (World Bank, 2012-03-19)China's progress in poverty
 reduction over the last 25 years is enviable. One cannot
 fail to be impressed by what this vast nation of 1.3 billion
 people has achieved in so little time. In terms of a wide
 range of indicators, the progress has been remarkable.
 Poverty in terms of income and consumption has been
 dramatically reduced. Progress has also been substantial in
 terms of human development indicators. Most of the
 millennium development goals have either already been
 achieved or the country is well on the way to achieving
 them. As a result of this progress, the country is now at a
 very different stage of development than it was at the dawn
 of the economic reforms at the beginning of the 1980s.
 China's poverty reduction performance has been even
 more striking. Between 1981 and 2004, the fraction of the
 population consuming below this poverty line fell from 65
 percent to 10 percent, and the absolute number of poor fell
 from 652 million to 135 million, a decline of over half a
 billion people. The most rapid declines in poverty, in both
 the poverty rate and the number of poor, occurred during the
 6th, 8th, and 10th plans. During the 7th plan period the
 number of poor actually rose, while in the 9th plan period,
 the poverty rate declined only marginally. But the pace of
 poverty reduction resumed between 2001 and 2004 and there
 are indications that during the first couple of years of the
 11th plan poverty has continued to decline rapidly. The most
 recent official estimate of rural poverty in China for 2007
 puts the number of poor at 14.79 million, or less than 2
 percent of the rural population. While there is no official
 urban poverty line, estimates by others have found poverty
 levels in urban areas to be negligible using an urban
 poverty line that is comparable to the official poverty line
 for rural areas. These estimates thus suggest that only
 about 1 percent of China's population is currently in
 extreme poverty. Notwithstanding this tremendous success,
 the central thesis of this report is that the task of
 poverty reduction in many ways continues and in some
 respects has become more demanding.
-
China - From Poor Areas to Poor People : China’s Evolving Poverty Reduction Agenda - An Assessment of Poverty and Inequality in ChinaWorld Bank (World Bank, 2009-03-05)China's progress in poverty
 reduction over the last 25 years is enviable. One cannot
 fail to be impressed by what this vast nation of 1.3 billion
 people has achieved in so little time. In terms of a wide
 range of indicators, the progress has been remarkable.
 Poverty in terms of income and consumption has been
 dramatically reduced. Progress has also been substantial in
 terms of human development indicators. Most of the
 millennium development goals have either already been
 achieved or the country is well on the way to achieving
 them. As a result of this progress, the country is now at a
 very different stage of development than it was at the dawn
 of the economic reforms at the beginning of the 1980s.
 China's poverty reduction performance has been even
 more striking. Between 1981 and 2004, the fraction of the
 population consuming below this poverty line fell from 65
 percent to 10 percent, and the absolute number of poor fell
 from 652 million to 135 million, a decline of over half a
 billion people. The most rapid declines in poverty, in both
 the poverty rate and the number of poor, occurred during the
 6th, 8th, and 10th plans. During the 7th plan period the
 number of poor actually rose, while in the 9th plan period,
 the poverty rate declined only marginally. But the pace of
 poverty reduction resumed between 2001 and 2004 and there
 are indications that during the first couple of years of the
 11th plan poverty has continued to decline rapidly. The most
 recent official estimate of rural poverty in China for 2007
 puts the number of poor at 14.79 million, or less than 2
 percent of the rural population. While there is no official
 urban poverty line, estimates by others have found poverty
 levels in urban areas to be negligible using an urban
 poverty line that is comparable to the official poverty line
 for rural areas. These estimates thus suggest that only
 about 1 percent of China's population is currently in
 extreme poverty. Notwithstanding this tremendous success,
 the central thesis of this report is that the task of
 poverty reduction in many ways continues and in some
 respects has become more demanding.