Type | Working Paper - Indaba Agricultural Policy Research Institute (IAPRI) |
Title | An In-depth Analysis of Zambia’s Agricultural Budget: Distributional Effects and Opportunity Cost |
Author(s) | |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | 2016 |
URL | https://pdfs.semanticscholar.org/a3a0/b51573e8ea5ba801dbd5efe671f02b77a443.pdf |
Abstract | Pro-poor budgets tend to achieve two things: 1) they tend to invest in public goods that generate long-run returns that benefit both the poor and the rich. These include research and development (R&D) investments, public education, and infrastructural investments; 2) they tend to invest in ways that help the very poor households overcome persistent asset constraints, thereby creating opportunities to exit entrenched poverty traps. These may also include well-targeted safety nets such as the Food Security Pack to address poverty and food insecurity and the Social Cash Transfer Scheme to help the most destitute, incapacitated and poor households to enable them meet basic needs. Unfortunately, these critical preconditions have been given little consideration as the focus in Zambia has been on aggregate growth rather than the substance of spending. The main objective of this paper was to examine and unpack the distributional effects of current government spending and to highlight ways in which spending could be redirected to achieve superior poverty reduction and welfare outcomes. |
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