9 results
Search Results
2. Multidimensional Re-creation of Vulnerabilities and Potential for Resilience in International Migration.
- Author
-
Julca, Alex
- Subjects
LABOR mobility ,ECONOMIC impact of emigration & immigration ,POVERTY ,ECONOMIC development ,LABOR supply ,CLIMATE change ,REMITTANCES ,UNITED States emigration & immigration - Abstract
International labour migration is a multidimensional process and primarily a family mechanism intended to reduce vulnerabilities associated with underlying inequalities. However, for immigrants, the break-up of physical contact with family members is an enduring feature of vulnerability in their communication with origins (often in developing countries). On the whole, family relationships are transformed: the absence of physical contact is traded-off with remittances sent home to family members. Remittances create potential for resilience by increasing human development of children, while reducing extreme poverty at the local level. Remittance flows are also an important source of foreign exchange for countries of origin. However, labour markets' polarization, backlash, and economic downturns at destinations (often in developed countries), and governments' moral hazard, currency revaluation, and production inertia at origins recreate vulnerabilities and disrupt the potential build-up of resilience. In fact, the re-creation of vulnerabilities largely outweighs the generation of resilience threads. The paper develops a typology that highlights the dynamic interaction between vulnerabilities and resilience, revealing the multiple aspects of people and remittances flows, the potential for mainstreaming migration policies into economic development, and the scale of the policy task to reduce vulnerabilities associated to international labour migration. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. American Indian Poverty in the Contemporary United States.
- Author
-
Davis, James J., Roscigno, Vincent J., and Wilson, George
- Subjects
POVERTY reduction ,SOCIAL conditions of Native Americans ,RACE discrimination in employment ,NATIVE American gaming industry ,LABOR market ,ECONOMIC development - Abstract
Little sociological attention over the last two decades has focused on the deprivation experienced by indigenous people. Fusing insights from American Indian history and the race and labor market inequality literatures, we address this gap in this article through a historically informed labor market analysis of poverty-an analysis that considers the pervasiveness of contemporary Native poverty, its potential basis in labor market opportunities, and the extent to which it has been patterned by two major demographic and economic shifts: (1) the rapid urbanization of the American Indian population and (2) the proliferation of tribally owned casinos. Findings reveal, most notably, the incredibly rigid and durable character of poverty for this population, historically and currently and across geographic space, and with little overall impact of local labor market opportunity. The presence of tribal casinos reduces such poverty, but only to a small degree and not nearly enough to compensate for sizable American Indian and white poverty differentials. Group history is key, we conclude, to shaping how space, labor markets, and economic development reduce or buttress relations of inequality. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. THE POVERTY REDUCTION SUCCESS OF PUBLIC TRANSFERS FOR WORKING AGE IMMIGRANTS AND REFUGEES IN THE UNITED STATES.
- Author
-
BOLLINGER, CHRISTOPHER R. and HAGSTROM, PAUL
- Subjects
IMMIGRANTS ,REFUGEES ,WORKING class ,POVERTY ,ECONOMIC development ,LABOR market - Abstract
Although there has been some research on the impacts of federal tax and transfer policies on poverty rates for immigrants, virtually no previous work investigates the most disadvantaged group of immigrants: refugees. We estimate probit models for three standard measures of poverty. We find that while immigrants and refugees in particular had much higher poverty rates in the early 1990s, the strong economic growth of the 1990s led to a convergence of those poverty rates by 2000. Our analysis demonstrates that the improvement was largely because of economic conditions and that welfare reform policies appear to have little differential impact on immigrants or refugees. We also find that refugees show a markedly greater response to local labor market conditions than other immigrants or native born. ( JEL H3, I3, J1) [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. No Country Left Behind? Performance Standards and Accountability in US Foreign Assistance.
- Author
-
Goldsmith, Arthur A.
- Subjects
FOREIGN aid (American) ,GOVERNMENT policy ,POVERTY ,DEVELOPING countries ,DEVELOPED countries ,NATIONAL income ,ECONOMIC development ,DEVELOPMENT economics ,INCOME inequality ,GOVERNMENT accountability ,GOVERNMENT liability ,ECONOMIC policy - Abstract
The accountability movement in public policy hails a new programme for US foreign assistance - the Millennium Challenge Account established in 2004 with the aim of 'picking winners' for grants among developing countries based on their demonstrated quality of governance. This article uses the MCA's own rating system to dispute its claim to know in advance which countries are best positioned to meet major development goals. High governance scores alone bear little or no relationship to growth in national income or decline in poverty. Attempting to measure public-policy performance limits the range of choice available to policy-makers, and may inadvertently limit true performance. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2011
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Financial aid and for-profit colleges: Does aid encourage entry?
- Author
-
Cellini, Stephanie Riegg
- Subjects
STUDENT financial aid ,FOR-profit universities & colleges ,SOCIAL sciences ,POVERTY ,SCHOOL enrollment ,ECONOMIC development ,COMMUNITY colleges ,TUITION - Abstract
Concerns over rising college tuition and slow economic growth have brought renewed attention to the role of federal and state financial aid programs in opening access to education. Despite a large body of literature examining the effects of grant aid on four‐year and public two‐year college enrollment, for‐profit colleges—particularly the vast majority that offer two‐year degrees and certificates—have largely been ignored. Using panel data methods and a new administrative data set of for‐profit colleges operating in California between 1989 and 2003, I assess the impact of the federal Pell Grant program, the G.I. Bill, and California's Cal Grant program on the net number of for‐profit colleges per county. The results suggest that for both Pell and Cal Grants, increases in the per‐student maximum award encourage for‐profit entry. This relationship is particularly strong in counties with high adult poverty levels, where more students are eligible for aid. Further, these gains in the private sector do not appear to come at the expense of the public sector. Rather, public community colleges also experience enrollment gains as the generosity of Pell and Cal Grants increases, although this reaction appears to be weaker than the reaction of for‐profits. © 2010 by the Association for Public Policy Analysis and Management. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Poverty measurement in the U.S., Europe, and developing countries.
- Author
-
Couch, Kenneth A. and Pirog, Maureen A.
- Subjects
POVERTY ,ECONOMIC development ,ECONOMIC indicators ,GOVERNMENT policy ,EMERGING markets ,ECONOMIC policy ,DEVELOPING countries - Abstract
The article discusses on the measure used to gauge poverty in the U.S., Europe and other developing countries. It discusses that the present official measure of poverty in the U.S. is flawed and both, the poverty threshold and measurement of available resources should be improved. It reports that European countries provided with sufficient social aid but they face a technical problem of relative poverty threshold. Also mentioned are the levels of economic development in developing and underdeveloped countries.
- Published
- 2010
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Weather Index Insurance for Agriculture and Rural Areas in Lower-Income Countries.
- Author
-
Barnett, Barry J. and Mahul, Olivier
- Subjects
WEATHER ,NATURAL disasters ,POVERTY ,RISK (Insurance) ,INCOME ,INSURANCE ,ECONOMIC development ,ECONOMIC indicators ,HOUSEHOLDS - Abstract
The article focuses on the association between weather risk and poverty as well as the significance of weather index insurance for agricultural and rural areas in lower-income countries in the U.S. Uninsured weather risks tend to contribute to the existence of chronic poverty, though health problems are often considered as the greatest risk encountered by many rural households. The risk of extreme weather events contributes to the existence of chronic poverty. It was concluded that the effective mechanisms transferring risk can catalyze investment and economic growth, lessening poverty in rural areas of lower income countries.
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. ECONOMIC RIGHTS AND THE WELFARE STATE: THE QUEST FOR POLICY INTEGRITY.
- Author
-
Morrow, William L.
- Subjects
CAPITALISM ,POVERTY ,POLICY sciences ,RESOURCE allocation ,ECONOMIC development ,MANAGEMENT - Abstract
Policies directed toward alleviating poverty and caring for the needy have become the scapegoat of those who decry the way in which our policies are theorized, developed, and implemented. This is not necessarily because they are the most faulty policies in the policy universe, but because they are, due to a constellation of circumstances, less culturally and politically defensible than are most policies. Most of them lack a strong constituent base, and most seem alien to the premises of democratic capitalism. A fundamental resource allocation problem confronts the many poor people, especially those who face major financial shortfalls due to injury, death of a family breadwinner, or unemployment. These individuals have a rightful claim on the U.S. government's resources to help them overcome their economic disadvantage.
- Published
- 1989
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
Discovery Service for Jio Institute Digital Library
For full access to our library's resources, please sign in.