Thursday, October 31, 2019


Stylized Facts about Poverty and Inequality in Nepal (pdf here)

     Absolute Poverty

  1. Absolute poverty decreased from 41.8 percent in 1995/96 to 25.2 percent in 2010/11(Source: NLSS Reports).
  2. Decline in rural poverty is higher than the decline in urban poverty during the period (Figure 1).
Figure 1
  1. As per the estimates of National Planning Commission, Nepal, absolute poverty in Nepal has reduced to 18.5 percent in 2018/19 (Economic Survey 2018/19).
  2. In terms of absolute poverty across provinces, estimates from NLSS 2010/11 show that such poverty rate is lowest in Province 1(12.4 percent) and highest in province 7(33.9 percent) (Figure 2).
Figure 2
  1. There is a widespread disparity across the districts in terms of poverty rates. There are five districts with absolute poverty rate below 10 percent and 5 districts with a poverty rate of 50 percent or more (figure 3).
Figure 3
  1. Small area estimates of poverty rates based on NLSS 2010/11 data show that Bajura is the district with the highest poverty rate (64.1 percent) and Kaski is the district with the lowest rate (4.0 percent) (Figure 4).

Figure 4

  1. The poverty headcount as per the World Bank $1.9 a day definition has reduced from 61.9 percent in 1995 to 46.1 percent in 2003 and further to 15.0 percent in 2010 (World Bank Database).
  2. The multidimensional headcount poverty rate for Nepal is 28.62 percent as of 2014. 
  3. Rural MPI poverty headcount ratio (33.2 percent) is much higher than for urban areas (7 percent).
  4.  Province 6 has the highest MPI poverty rate (51.2 percent) whereas Province 3 has the lowest poverty (12.2 percent).
Figure 5
  1. Province 2 has the largest number of multidimensionally poor people  (35 percent of the MPI poor) followed by Province 5 (20 percent). Province 4 has the lowest number of multidimensionally poor people (5 percent of the MPI poor). 
  2. The MPI poverty has declined from 59.35 percent in 2006 to 39.13 percent in 2011 and further to 28.62 percent in 2014

Inequality

  1. NLSS 2010/11 estimates show that consumption based Gini coefficient has reduced from 41.4 percent in 2003/04 to 32.8 percent in 2010/11. However, this is marginally above the 1995/96 level (figure 6).
Figure 6
  1.  NLSS 2010/11 data show that almost 56 percent of the income in Nepal is held by the richest 20 percent of the population while only 4 percent of the income goes to the poorest 20 percent. The average per capita income of the richest 20 percent is almost 14 times the income per capital of the poorest 20 percent.
Figure 7
  1. In terms of deciles, the richest 10 percent hold almost 40 percent of total income whereas the poorest 10 percent get only 1.5 percent.
  2. The distribution of consumption shows somewhat a better picture. As per the estimates from NLSS 2010/11, 45.1 percent of the consumption expenditure is made by the richest 20 percent while such share for the richest 20 percent is 7.6 percent (figure 8).
Figure 8
  1. In terms of decile groups, the richest 10 percent of the population hold 29.5 percent of the consumption where as only 3.2 percent of the consumption goes to the poorest 10 poorest.
  2. Estimates from the World Bank show a similar picture. As per its estimates, Gini index showing the inequality of income distribution increased from 35.2 percent in 1995 to 43.8 percent and reduced to 32.8 percent in 2010.
  3. The distribution of income among the income groups is very asymmetric. As per the world bank estimates, the poorest 20 percent of the population receive about 8.3 percent of total income while the richest 20 percent receive about 41.5 percent of the income.
Share of Income by Income Groups
1995
2003
2010
Poorest 20 %
7.80
6.50
8.30
Second 20 %
11.90
9.70
12.10
Third 20 %
15.60
13.40
16.20
Fourth 20 %
21.00
19.20
21.80
Richest 20 %
43.70
51.20
41.50
Source : World Bank  
  1. However, a study done by Oxfam shows that the level of inequality is worsening in Nepal over the years. In 2010/11, Nepal had one of the highest income Gini coefficients in the world at 49.42.
  2. The study has shown that income inequality has widened considerably during 1995/96 to 2010/11.  
Figure 9
  1. The Palma ratio, share of income by the top 10 percent and the bottom 40 percent shows that income of the richest 10percent of Nepalese is more than three times that of the poorest 40percent.
  2. During the period from 1995/96 to 2010/11, only the richest 20 percent of Nepal’s population experienced an increase in income share. Such share decreased for all other groups.
Figure 10
  1. Wealth inequality is substantially high in Nepal as shown by the wealth Gini coefficient of 0.74 (per capita).  The Wealth Palma ratio of 26.7 shows that the richest 10percent of the Nepalese people hold more than 26 times the wealth of the poorest 40percent.
Figure 11
  1. Land inequality is the basic form of wealth inequality. The richest 7percent of households own around 31percent of agricultural land. More than half of Nepali farmers own less than 0.5 hectares of land and 29 percent of the population do not own any land at all (Oxfam Report).
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References

https://blogs.worldbank.org/endpovertyinsouthasia/demystifying-economic-inequality-nepal
https://cbs.gov.np/poverty-in-nepal-2010-11/
https://oxfamilibrary.openrepository.com/bitstream/handle/10546/620607/bp-fighting-inequality-nepal-110119-en.pdf
https://www.nepalitimes.com/banner/nepals-great-income-divide/
World Bank Database available at https://data.worldbank.org/country/Nepal.







 



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