Understanding and supporting sustained pathways out of extreme poverty and deprivation: Philippines National Report

CPAN work on Poverty Dynamics investigates the extent and drivers of transitory and sustained escapes from poverty across a series of country studies to better understand the
sources of resilience that enable people to sustainably escape poverty given the complex risk environments in which they live. The objective of this report is to investigate the drivers of sustained and transitory escapes from poverty in the Philippines. It responds to the question:

  • What are the factors associated with households escaping poverty and subsequently staying out of poverty?

  • How does this compare with households who escape only to later fall back into poverty?

This case study finds that transitory poverty escapes and impoverishment are significant phenomenon in the Philippines. Findings from this report are based on analysis from three rounds of the panel component of the Family Income and Expenditure Survey over 2003-2009 in addition to qualitative research approaches, in particular, key informant interviews, life histories, and participatory wealth ranking in two regions (Bicol- Daraga and Albay; and SOCCSKSARGEN- General Santos and Sarangani).

The report investigates the resources (land, livestock, and assets), attributes (household composition and education level), and activities (including jobs and engagement in non-farm activities) of households that enable them to escape poverty sustainably and minimize the likelihood of returning to living in poverty again often in the face of shocks. 

Author: Vidya Diwakar 

Click here to download the report

Note: This report is accompanied by a Policy Implication Brief, which presents policy implications for sustaining poverty escapes in the Philippines that emerge from the analysis presented in this study

Sustained and Transitory escapes of poverty in the Philippines

This report is part of the Resilience and Poverty Escapes project, supported by:  

 

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