
Understanding Poverty Dynamics: Evidence from Nine Villages in Cambodia
Abstract/Summary
Poverty in Cambodia is one of the highest in Asia. Despite
the country’s very impressive GDP growth in the last decade or so, poverty
remains pervasive specifically in the rural areas. The food and economic crises
along with the idiosyncratic shocks of the recent years put the plight of the
poor and near-poor at even greater risk. The Poverty Dynamics Study (PDS), as a
longitudinal monitoring exercise, helps shed light on the extent, determinants,
and nuances of the face of Cambodian poverty against the impacts of major macro
and micro developments. Employing a mixed methods approach, the quantitative
aspect involved statistical analyses of the panel data on 897 households from
nine villages representing different geo-climatic regions in the country. This
data was generated from CDRI’s Moving Out of Poverty Study (MOPS) in 2001, the
MOPS in 2004/5 and the PDS survey in 2008, with financial and technical support
from the World Bank. The qualitative aspect, on the other hand, drew upon
analyses of the results of focus group discussions (FGDs) and semi-structured
interviews (SSIs) with households and individuals from the same nine study
villages. Based on the results of the PDS presented in this report, policy
recommendations have been formulated in the hope of helping tailor the
government’s poverty reduction policies and advance their implementation.
Addressing
Poverty Remain the Top Priority of Development Policies
Poverty is a multidimensional phenomenon. It is an outcome
of interlocking problems that operate at different levels and contexts. In
Cambodia, the incidence of poverty has been consistently high albeit this has
been decreasing in recent years and can be explained by countrylevel, sectoral
and micro-level factors. At the national level, Cambodia’s legacy of conflict, repression
and isolation stands as a central explanation to why the country has become one
of the world’s poorest. This legacy lingers in key broad determinants of
poverty, particularly the low levels of physical and human capital and poor
governance. The impressive growth period between 1998 and 2008 also witnessed
the impact on poverty of economic and non-economic shocks. At the sectoral
level, the narrow economic base of growth and the under performance of the
agricultural sector highlight poverty in Cambodia as a mainly rural phenomenon.
At the micro-level, poor asset ownership, limited access to public goods and
finance, low levels of education and nutrition, and idiosyncratic shocks
jointly resulted in communal, household and individual poverty.
Cambodia achieved a
successful economic and social restructuring between 1998 and 2008 that spurred
economic growth and poverty reduction. In time, the Royal Government of
Cambodia (RGC) declared poverty alleviation as its single most important long
term goal, recognising that poverty reduction is integral to social
reconciliation and key to maintaining political stability. The fulfilment of
this mission rests on what has been formally called the Rectangular Strategy.
This strategy’s core component is improvement in governance and its four
pillars are as follows: enhancement of agriculture; private sector development
and employment generation; human resource development; and infrastructure
building. This strategy has borne fruit, sustaining the progress in expanding
the economy and diminishing poverty. However, poverty reduction has not matched
the pace of economic growth, suggesting gaps in the translation of policy into
action.
Poverty
Dynamics and Socio-economic Trends: Community Perspectives
The rural study villages have different experiences in
changing poverty headcount and income. This demonstrates that income growth may
have been a necessary but certainly not a sufficient condition for poverty
reduction. The PDS suggests that poverty headcount declined in many rural
villages between 2004/5 and 2008, a period that had substantial increases in
average real per capita income and consumption. Average real per capita income
rose significantly for almost all the study villages but this did not hold for
consumption. Ultimately, using the consumption approach, some villages
experienced a decline in poverty, but its incidence in some villages increased.
Income growth appeared to be strongly, positively related with asset ownership
and other welfare improvement. However, the experience of the nine study
villages varied greatly in terms of sustainable food and non-food consumption
and depended on their starting base in 2001. It is important to note that most
study villages experienced consumption deficits in relation to the 2008 village
poverty line. Successful agricultural villages have experienced significant
reduction in poverty headcount or low poverty incidence. Land sales and
transaction was viewed as a key factor in improvements in well-being and poverty
reduction in some village.
The study villages were grouped into six strongly and three
poorly performing villages based on the ability and capacity of each to exploit
social, economic and political developments for the purpose of augmenting
income and consumption, especially between 2005 and 2008. Chief of these
developments included (1) agricultural growth; (2) enhanced access to common property
resources (CPR) for subsistence and commercial purposes; (3) food price
escalation in 2007 and then deflation by the middle of 2008; and the (4) real
estate boom between 2005 and July 2008. These developments had direct and
indirect positive impact on household welfare in the study villages. However,
some gains tended to be unsustainable for such reasons as the illegal nature of
the CPR access and the landlessness caused by real estate transactions. For example,
increased CPR access as a result of the fisheries and forestry reform and its
political implications before the national election in July 2008 contributed
greatly to the remarkable rise of total average per capita income and helped
boost agricultural growth in the CPR villages. These villages however
experienced uneven change in poverty headcount. That is because increased
income in the natural resource development villages stemmed mostly from the
illegal conversion of forest and flooded forest for cultivation between 2004/5
and 2008, but such an increase cannot be sustainable. Wage labour became an
important source of income for landless households and some villages, but this
income tended to sustain improvements in livelihoods and the mitigation of
poverty.
The sample rural households seem to have benefited from
infrastructure development and increased availability of microcredit services.
However, this improvement was not enough to raise the capacity of rural
households to cope with social and economic shocks or to sustain their
consumption above the village poverty line to avoid sliding into poverty.
Consumption and poverty reduction also proved unstable in those villages where
most households depended heavily on the cultivation of wet season rice, wage
labour and access to CPR. There were increased efforts to grow more cash crops
and raise livestock in addition to rice production but the lack of know-how and
inadequate extension services undermined progress. These findings highlight the
need to speed up infrastructure development, provision of adequate effective extension
services, and agricultural diversification.
Empirical
Analysis: Chronic and Transient Poverty in Nine Villages
The empirical analysis uses three separate years of unique
panel data on 827 households to measure transient and chronic poverty based on
real total expenditure per capita as a welfare indicator. The results show that
44 percent of the sample households experienced transient poverty while chronic
poverty affected 15 percent. There are high levels of chronic and transient
poverty in the Tonle Sap and Plateau regions. Using multinomial logit regression
to identify the causes of transient and chronic poverty, the econometric
evidence shows that transient poverty is associated with household composition,
the gender of the household head and marital status. Household composition,
number of dependent household members, males aged 15–64, education of the household head and ownership of
non-land assets are important factors in chronic poverty but are not
significant in transient poverty. The number of females aged 15–64 increases both chronic and transient poverty.
The asset approach to measuring chronic and transient
poverty found that the largest numbers of households were transient poor,
consistently with the findings of the consumption approach; however, the asset
measure offers new important and more telling insights into the key
determinants of chronic and transient poverty. Households experiencing
transient poverty account for 40 percent of the sample and chronic poverty for
30 percent. The Tonle Sap and plateau regions have lower chronic poverty and
higher transient poverty than the coastal region. Male adults aged 15–64 years, household head characteristics such as educational
level and occupation, agricultural land, non-land assets and livestock are
important factors for chronic poverty but are not significant determinants of
transient poverty. Transient poverty is negatively associated with non-land
assets. Using either of the consumption or asset approach, the empirical
results suggest that different policies will be needed to address chronic and transient
poverty and for each agro-climatic region.
Policy
implications
A number of pro poor policy directions can be drawn from the
key findings of this micro study. These policies are advanced to support both
community growth and poverty reduction and respond to transient and chronic
poverty through support for both farm and non-farm employment for poverty
reduction. These policies need to be integrated into an agricultural and rural
development policy framework and upcoming development interventions. Such
policies and interventions can be effective if they harness existing synergy of
community growth and economic opportunities generated along with structural
change in order to build the capacities of the poor. This will not only
increase productivity but also pave for stronger capacity to cope with socio
and economic shocks/crises. Coordination of pro-poor policies and interventions
has to be done through strategic sectoral planning and define the roles of
national and sub-national bodies within the D&D reform structure. The
private sector and civil society have important parts to play in highlighting
major technical, administrative and political challenges to policy design and
implementation. However, promoting structural change from an agricultural to a non-agricultural-based
growth requires large-scale and long-term investments.
Supporting
Community Growth for Poverty Reduction
1.
Pro-poor strategic development framework should be integrated and coordinated
in development interventions in order to build the capacities of the poor. These
should focus on rural infrastructure; generating labour demand; technical
changes for productivity gains; and, access to stable input, output and
financial markets to support such technologies. These factors should enable the
poor to benefit from widespread technology adoption in response to labour
markets and the need to diversify in the face of risks of falling grain prices.
The process encompasses structural change that requires careful targeting of
policies, strategic planning and coordination mechanisms to address the
different endowments and needs of the poor in rural areas and the differences
between the chronically and transient poor.
2. Pro-poor agricultural
development policy for poverty reduction should enhance the capacity and
productivity for income generation of small landholding farmers. Strategic
mechanisms should be in place for the small farmers to address their problems
and needs so that they can increase productivity and diversification. Intensifying and diversifying
agricultural activities to increase income of small farmers has been supported
by recent market developments in both strongly and poorly performing villages. This development, however, has been
constrained by a lack of know-how, ineffective agricultural extension services
and inadequate savings and irrigation systems. At the same time, migration has
become an alternative coping strategy for the growing labour force while the
agricultural landless and land concentration has risen.
3. Pro-poor agriculture should
address the needs of poor, rural agricultural households, especially existing
conflicts over land and water access for small farmers. Conflicts
over CPR access (land and water) for subsistence and commercial agricultural
and related activities remain unresolved and have further inhibited
agricultural development and employment creation in rural areas. This should be
addressed through land distribution and security, agricultural modernisation
and diversification and public goods (infrastructure and agricultural extension
services) delivery for small farmers. A key priority should speed up land
titling processes and social land concession to address inequality in land
ownership and target frontier areas that are prone to land and water conflicts
or conflict between subsistence and commercial interests. Agricultural
mechanisms, infrastructure, irrigation, reliable agricultural loans and
extension services for small farmers must be set in place to improve land
productivity and promote agricultural intensification and diversification to
induce investments in modern equipment and systems. With such policy interventions,
small farmers gain a better capacity to cope with shocks and exploit
opportunities generated by increased market connections.
4. Bolster crisis response that
protection schemes are required for ex-ante and ex-post crisis responses that
should establish and build the community capacity of crisis responses as part
of poverty reduction strategies. The government is in the process of
establishing a comprehensive social safety net system. Three aspects of this
are particularly important: funding sustainability; programme design (targeting
and type of schemes, with public work programmes and cash transfers vital); and
unified administration. Ex-ante strategies, which seek to enhance income
sustainability, are longer in term that can diversify economic base.
5. Enhance advanced
community-based CPR management to secure pro-poor property rights access for
fisheries and forestry. Increasing community ownership of the commons not only formally
entitles local villagers to the benefits of CPR access but also formally endows
them with the responsibility to ensure resource sustainability. Collective
action has been shown to sustain successful CPR management, but is subject to
the satisfaction of several conditions. First, it has to be based on a
well-defined and context-appropriate property rights regime, with the
boundaries under management both clearly laid out and also congruent with the ecosystem
and local administrative structures. Second, cost-benefit sharing arrangements must
be as equitable as possible, as key factors in the sustainability of
participatory resource management are the distribution of dividends and
decision-making power. Third, the success of CPR management hinges on the
quality of local governance. Reneging on obligations and free-riding and
cheating the system can occur, and it is important to devise cost-effective
monitoring, enforcement and sanctioning systems. Fourth, capacity building is a
prerequisite for the success of participatory schemes, and technical assistance
to enhance the capacities of local communities should be provided. Sustainable
natural resource use requires a blend of modern and indigenous knowledge of
conservation and utilisation. This should be supported
through consultative discussions to avert conflict and through technical assistance
to communities.
6.
Continue aggressive implementation of educational strategies and effective
pro-poor scholarship schemes. Human
capital for both transient and chronic poor through higher educational
attainment and appropriate life skill levels can be promoted by simultaneously increasing
education budgets (a priority sector) and enhancing the quality of spending. Access
to primary education, already widespread, can be further improved through
targeted spending on education quality. Problematic areas also include low
teacher competencies and school retention rates. At the secondary and tertiary
levels, low enrolment ratios must be improved, and budgets for secondary
education must be increased to make access more affordable. In terms of
workforce skills, there is a mismatch between present levels of skills and the
requirements of the private sector, which prevents labour movement into more productive
sectors. The lack of management skills is an oft-cited reason for the limited number
of Cambodians with managerial positions in the garment sector. The private
sector has to be encouraged to take up the slack in offering and funding
vocational and technical training opportunities.
Pro-Poor
Policy Responses to Chronic and Transient Poverty
Two different sets of specific policy responses are needed
for the chronic and transient poor, groups which encounter different livelihood
problems.
Policies
for the chronically poor:
The chronically poor have been inactive participants and
beneficiaries from the recent growth and developments. They lack financial and
productive assets. They have weak human and physical capital, with low
education levels and chronic health problems. Most chronically poor are self-employed
or daily wage workers within the village, which are opportunities that are
mostly insecure and with lower wages. A number of key strategies should be
specifically created to improve the capacity of the chronically poor to move
out of poverty.
7.
Expand pro-poor scholarships and free health care services to target the
chronically poor. All poor households have benefited from pro-poor health
services in recent years through the ID Poor card from the Ministry of
Planning. However, only some households have benefited from the universal
education policy and the school feeding programme; other households have had to
force their children to withdraw from school at an early age to help in earning
incomes or foraging for food. This study supports the expansion of the pro-poor
scholarship programme and free health care services along with non-farm income generation
programmes for parents as paths out of poverty for the chronically poor.
8.
Cash transfer programmes for small business creation and non-farm activities
are an effective tool to help the chronically poor. The
strategic design of these kinds of interventions should be linked to the
broader market demand and appropriate vocational training and understanding of
market chains in order to maximise profits. Special arrangements for cash transfer
programmes supported by vocational training and saving schemes or rural credit
for small business creation is the best option for this section of the
chronically poor, especially for female-headed households without male labour.
9.
Enhance support for development services for both chronically and transient
poor. Single female-headed households often consider alternative
income generation activities such as poultry and pig rearing but suffer from
lack of knowledge as to how to protect their animals from infectious diseases.
This problem is not specific to the chronically and transient poor but relates
to livestock production in both strongly and poorly performing villages. It can
be addressed by increasing and strengthening agricultural extension services
for the poor.
Policies
for the transient poor:
Transient poor households have a different set of problems compared
with the chronically poor, often relating to their inability to cope with
income shocks. They have assets for sale to cope with shocks, but during the
recent crises the demand for and price of assets fell and, without formal
credit, they became more vulnerable to sliding into poverty. This group of the
poor could benefit from formal insurance and social protection schemes. The
following strategies are worth considering in helping the transient poor.
10.
Formal protection schemes are needed in response to crises, such as food for
work and employment creation programmes to provide work for the unemployed
and/or dismissed workers on labour-intensive government projects.
11.
Build community risk reduction mechanisms such as saving groups. Saving
schemes and rice banks were made available to the poor by NGO-led development
initiatives to sustain their consumption in times of need, but these community
based efforts have not been strong enough to cope with the magnitude of the
impact of income shocks. The transient poor have often had to rely on
traditional coping strategies such as loans from moneylenders with high
interest rates and sales of farm outputs to merchants/traders who willing to
offer them credit in times of need but for lower than normal farm-gate prices.
This has further eroded their capacity to recover from income shocks. The
traditional buffer of CPR used for coping with food shortages is no longer
available; the only alternative has been migration to secure earnings
elsewhere. This is possible with households that have a labour surplus but less
so for single female-headed transient poor households, which are left with
limited options.
12. Promote linkages between social protection and
pro-poor agricultural development. Agricultural productivity
can be supported by well-designed social protection programmes. Productive
capacities can be enhanced through the expansion of quality public services for
technical transfers to the poor, and such social protection can enhance
resilience in the face of threats, limit disinvestment, reduce risk and promote
investment by the poor. Crop and livestock insurance schemes through market
interventions by the government are important in times of economic crisis, and
agriculture should be subject to more social protection, and protection which
is sensitive to impacts on production. The experience of the recent economic
crises shows that allocations of national insurance funds need to be well-planned
and implemented. For the purposes of poverty reduction, however, this study suggests
social protection interventions be given priority in the plateau, Tonle Sap and
coastal regions, where concentrations of transient poor are highest,
particularly since the recent economic crises.