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The political economy of development
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 Introduction

 Income Poverty

Social Indicators:

Health: 

Health status and health care services for the poor

Health: the problem of AIDS

Education

Water and sanitation

What the Poor Say


Social Indicators

Health status and health care services for the poor

Children born into poor families have a higher chance of dying before their 5th birthday than children born into better-off families—but the differences varies greatly across countries:

  • in Ghana and Pakistan, the under-5 mortality rate for the poorest 20 percent of children is only 1.1-1.2 times the rate for the richest 20 percent. In South Africa, it is twice as high;
  • but in NE and SE Brazil the under-5 mortality rate for the poorest 20 percent of children is over 10 times that of the richest 20 percent of children;
  • Inequalities matter but so too do averages: Brazil's poorest children fare much worse in terms of their chances of surviving to their 5th birthday than their rich counterparts, but they fare far better, on average, than the richest 20 percent of children in the other three countries; likewise, it is small consolation to poor Pakistani children that their survival chances are not dissimilar from those of the richest 20 percent of children, given that the latter have a risk of dying before their 5th birthday of 145/1000 (Table 12).

The poor are less likely to obtain health care than are the rich:

  • Between 1992 and 1997, in ten developing countries, only 22 percent of births among the bottom twenty percent of the population were attended by medically trained health staff, compared with 76 percent for those in the top twenty percent.
  • In the same period, only 41 percent of the poor suffering from acute respiratory infections were treated in a health facility, compared to 59 percent of the non-poor.
  • In Peru in 1990 only 20 percent of the rural poor and 35 percent of the urban poor sought treatment when ill, compared with 39 percent and 57 percent of the rural and urban rich (see Table 13).

The poor are much more affected by communicable diseases than the rich:

  • In 1990, 59 percent of all deaths among the poorest 20 percent of the world population were caused by communicable diseases, against 8 percent for the rich.

Table 12. Under-5 Mortality rate inequalities (per 1,000)

Country

Period

Average rate

Poorest 20%

Richest 20%

Poor/ Rich

Brazil (NE & SE)

1987-92

63

116

11

10.4

Ghana

1978-89

142

155

130

1.2

Pakistan

1981-90

147

160

145

1.1

South Africa

1985-89

113

155

71

2.2

Source: Wagstaff (1999) Inequalities in Child Mortality in the Developing World.

 

Table 13. Percentage of the Rural and Urban Ill Population Seeking Treatment

Income Group

Country

Poorest 20%

Richest 20%

Rich/ Poor

Rural
Côte d’Ivoire 1988

23

44

1.9

Ghana 1989

26

46

1.8

Jamaica 1989

44

56

1.3

Peru 1990

20

39

2.0

Urban
Côte d’Ivoire 1988

49

64

1.3

Ghana 1989

40

59

1.5

Jamaica 1989

43

60

1.4

Peru 1990

35

57

1.6

Source: Baker, Judy and Jacques van der Gaag (1993), "Equity in Health Care and Health Care Financing: Evidence from Five Developing Countries."

 


Next: Health: the problem of AIDS