Multidimensional Poverty among the Villages of the South African Former Homeland of Qwaqwa

<p>Poverty has remained topical in international development policy efforts, particularly in the developing world. It is much more topical in the South Africa context due to the legacy left by the apartheid system. Keeping in mind the history of South Africa, this study aims to analyse the mul...

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Main Author: Rachel Nishimwe-Niyimbanira
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: EconJournals 2018-05-01
Series:International Journal of Economics and Financial Issues
Online Access:https://www.econjournals.com/index.php/ijefi/article/view/5660
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spelling doaj-d9fdf7c7715248e0b844ddec35e0103c2020-11-25T00:49:48ZengEconJournalsInternational Journal of Economics and Financial Issues2146-41382018-05-01832412493308Multidimensional Poverty among the Villages of the South African Former Homeland of QwaqwaRachel Nishimwe-Niyimbanira0University of Mpumalanga<p>Poverty has remained topical in international development policy efforts, particularly in the developing world. It is much more topical in the South Africa context due to the legacy left by the apartheid system. Keeping in mind the history of South Africa, this study aims to analyse the multidimensional aspects of poverty in different villages of the former South African homeland of QwaQwa. Seven dimensions of deprivation that could be constructed based on 18 indicators were identified. These dimensions include education, housing and clothing, water and sanitation, assets, air quality, income, and health. A sample of 404 households was randomly selected in eight villages of QwaQwa. The Alkire and Foster family of measures was used for the multidimensional analysis of poverty and was compared to the income poverty. The results showed that the village having the highest estimates of income headcount ratio <em>H</em> was not the one having the highest estimates of multidimensional headcount ratio and intensity of poverty<em> M<sub>0</sub></em>.<em> </em>Similarly, the village with the lowest estimates of income <em>H </em>was not the one having the lowest estimates of multidimensional <em>H </em>and <em>M<sub>0</sub>.</em> This was due to the presence of high levels of deprivation in the other dimensions compared to the income deprivation. The intensity of poverty showed that Kudumane and Boitekong are the most deprived villages while Bochabela was found to be the least deprived village. The robustness of village rankings to changes in the poverty cut-off <em>k</em> confirmed that Kudumane and Boitekong are dominated by other villages both in poverty headcount ratio and intensity of poverty. The study has brought out meaningful results that can potentially provide useful tools for budget allocation among the villages of QwaQwa and within themselves, by applying among other things, the use of different dimensions.</p><p><strong>Keywords</strong>: Multidimensional poverty, former South African Homeland, Alkire and Foster methodology, QwaQwa</p><p><strong>JEL Classifications:</strong> I3, I32, O55</p>https://www.econjournals.com/index.php/ijefi/article/view/5660
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Rachel Nishimwe-Niyimbanira
spellingShingle Rachel Nishimwe-Niyimbanira
Multidimensional Poverty among the Villages of the South African Former Homeland of Qwaqwa
International Journal of Economics and Financial Issues
author_facet Rachel Nishimwe-Niyimbanira
author_sort Rachel Nishimwe-Niyimbanira
title Multidimensional Poverty among the Villages of the South African Former Homeland of Qwaqwa
title_short Multidimensional Poverty among the Villages of the South African Former Homeland of Qwaqwa
title_full Multidimensional Poverty among the Villages of the South African Former Homeland of Qwaqwa
title_fullStr Multidimensional Poverty among the Villages of the South African Former Homeland of Qwaqwa
title_full_unstemmed Multidimensional Poverty among the Villages of the South African Former Homeland of Qwaqwa
title_sort multidimensional poverty among the villages of the south african former homeland of qwaqwa
publisher EconJournals
series International Journal of Economics and Financial Issues
issn 2146-4138
publishDate 2018-05-01
description <p>Poverty has remained topical in international development policy efforts, particularly in the developing world. It is much more topical in the South Africa context due to the legacy left by the apartheid system. Keeping in mind the history of South Africa, this study aims to analyse the multidimensional aspects of poverty in different villages of the former South African homeland of QwaQwa. Seven dimensions of deprivation that could be constructed based on 18 indicators were identified. These dimensions include education, housing and clothing, water and sanitation, assets, air quality, income, and health. A sample of 404 households was randomly selected in eight villages of QwaQwa. The Alkire and Foster family of measures was used for the multidimensional analysis of poverty and was compared to the income poverty. The results showed that the village having the highest estimates of income headcount ratio <em>H</em> was not the one having the highest estimates of multidimensional headcount ratio and intensity of poverty<em> M<sub>0</sub></em>.<em> </em>Similarly, the village with the lowest estimates of income <em>H </em>was not the one having the lowest estimates of multidimensional <em>H </em>and <em>M<sub>0</sub>.</em> This was due to the presence of high levels of deprivation in the other dimensions compared to the income deprivation. The intensity of poverty showed that Kudumane and Boitekong are the most deprived villages while Bochabela was found to be the least deprived village. The robustness of village rankings to changes in the poverty cut-off <em>k</em> confirmed that Kudumane and Boitekong are dominated by other villages both in poverty headcount ratio and intensity of poverty. The study has brought out meaningful results that can potentially provide useful tools for budget allocation among the villages of QwaQwa and within themselves, by applying among other things, the use of different dimensions.</p><p><strong>Keywords</strong>: Multidimensional poverty, former South African Homeland, Alkire and Foster methodology, QwaQwa</p><p><strong>JEL Classifications:</strong> I3, I32, O55</p>
url https://www.econjournals.com/index.php/ijefi/article/view/5660
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