Skip navigation

Report

The Uganda Poverty Assessment Report 2016 : Farms, Cities and Good Fortune - Assessing Poverty Reduction in Uganda from 2006 to 2013

SANITATION PER CAPITA CONSUMPTION POVERTY POVERTY SAFETY NET PROGRAMS RISKS FOOD NEEDS HOUSEHOLD SIZE HOUSEHOLD SURVEY AGRICULTURAL GROWTH POVERTY LINE LAND REFORM IMPACT ON POVERTY ECONOMIC GROWTH POOR COMMUNITIES RURAL URBAN NATIONAL RURAL FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS POVERTY LEVELS INCOME POVERTY FOOD CONSUMPTION INCOME FORMAL SAFETY NETS POVERTY RATES POVERTY ESTIMATES AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTION EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES NATIONAL POVERTY LINE LIVESTOCK PRODUCTION SAVINGS ACCOUNTS COUNTERFACTUAL NUTRITION OUTCOMES RURAL FINANCIAL MARKETS ECONOMIC DIVERSIFICATION POLITICAL ECONOMY DEATH FOOD POLICY NATIONAL POVERTY AGRICULTURAL EXTENSION POOR PEOPLE EXTREME POVERTY LINE INCOME SUPPORT FARM INCOME LIVESTOCK INCOME SOCIAL PROGRAMS RURAL POPULATION CONFLICT MEASURES POVERTY MEASURES NATIONAL POVERTY LINES HOUSEHOLD DEMOGRAPHICS INCOME EARNING POTENTIAL SAFETY NETS POVERTY REDUCTION AGRICULTURAL PRACTICES AGRICULTURAL WAGE FOOD MARKETS RURAL POPULATIONS SAVINGS CROP PRODUCTION TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE INCIDENCE ANALYSIS AGRICULTURAL COMMODITIES FOOD BASKET RURAL HOUSEHOLDS FOOD POVERTY LINE HOUSEHOLD HEAD RURAL INCOME POVERTY GAP AGRICULTURAL TECHNOLOGY POVERTY REDUCING INCOME GROWTH FARM EMPLOYMENT VILLAGE ECONOMIES POVERTY INCIDENCE TRANSFERS POOR AREAS PARTICIPATORY POVERTY ASSESSMENT INTERNATIONAL POVERTY LINE AGRICULTURAL WAGES HOUSEHOLD COMPOSITION HOUSEHOLD INCOME POVERTY STATUS EMPLOYMENT INCOME HOUSEHOLD SURVEYS LAND OWNERSHIP FOOD EXPENDITURES SOCIAL SECURITY FARMERS POOR” HOUSEHOLDS RURAL VILLAGES CASH TRANSFERS BETTER ACCESS TO MARKETS RURAL MIGRANTS HOUSEHOLD HEADS FOOD PRODUCTION FOOD ITEMS PUBLIC SAFETY NETS NUTRITIONAL STATUS UNEMPLOYMENT POVERTY LINES HUMAN CAPITAL POVERTY INDEX CHRONIC MALNUTRITION RURAL MIGRATION DROUGHT FEMALE-HEADED HOUSEHOLDS FOOD POVERTY FARM INCOME GROWTH RURAL AREA REMOTE RURAL AREAS FARM ACTIVITIES AGRICULTURAL EMPLOYMENT FINANCIAL INSTRUMENTS RURAL POVERTY INCOME DISTRIBUTION FOOD GOODS AGRICULTURAL SECTOR FOOD EXPENDITURE IMPACT OF SHOCKS SMALLHOLDER FARMERS MALNUTRITION RURAL CHILD NUTRITION FARM WORK NUTRITION LAND SIZE ACCESS TO MARKETS POVERTY SEVERITY PRIVATE TRANSFERS AGRICULTURAL INPUTS SCHOOL FEEDING FARM INCOMES EMPLOYMENT IN AGRICULTURE CHILD MORTALITY INSURANCE FEMALE FARMERS TARGETING POVERTY INDICATORS AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTS CONSUMPTION SMOOTHING FOOD SHARE DRINKING WATER WAR EXTREME POVERTY IRRIGATION LACK OF KNOWLEDGE FOOD CROPS FARM SELF-EMPLOYMENT ACCESS TO SERVICES RURAL AREAS POVERTY POOR FARMERS AGRICULTURAL INCOMES FEEDING PROGRAMS AGRICULTURAL PRODUCE HOUSEHOLD CONSUMPTION INFORMAL INSURANCE SCHOOL FEEDING PROGRAMS INFORMAL TRANSFERS RURAL ELECTRIFICATION AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTIVITY RURAL TRANSFORMATION SUSTAINABLE POVERTY REDUCTION HOUSEHOLD WELFARE POOR POVERTY ASSESSMENT LACK OF INFORMATION FOOD PRICES PUBLIC SPENDING RURAL DEVELOPMENT INDICATORS OF POVERTY LAND MANAGEMENT CROP INCOME INFORMAL INSURANCE MECHANISMS RURAL POVERTY REDUCTION POVERTY ANALYSIS POVERTY ALLEVIATION HOUSEHOLD LIVING STANDARDS HUMAN DEVELOPMENT INCOME VOLATILITY INEQUALITY POOR HOUSEHOLDS
153
0

Attachments [ 0 ]

There are no files associated with this item.

More Details

World Bank, Washington, DC
Africa | Uganda
2017-02-17T15:53:53Z | 2017-02-17T15:53:53Z | 2016-09

Uganda’s progress in reducing poverty from 1993 to 2006 is a remarkable story of success that has been well told. The narrative of Uganda’s continued, albeit it slightly slower, progress in reducing poverty since 2006 is less familiar. This was a period in which growth slowed as the gains from reforms years earlier had been fully realized, and weak infrastructure and increasing corruption increasingly constrained private sector competitiveness (World Bank 2015). This report examines Uganda’s progress in reducing poverty, with a specific focus on the period 2006 to 2013. The report shows that high growth from 2006 to 2010 benefited poverty reduction. Before turning in further detail to the key findings of the report, it is important to note that the analysis undertaken in this report is only possible because the Government of Uganda has invested in a high quality series of household surveys to document progress in wellbeing since 1993. The Uganda Bureau of Statistics has conducted high-quality household surveys that every three to four years that have provided a comparable series of data on poverty and other household characteristics for the last twenty years. Uganda is one of the few countries in the region to have achieved this level of comparable, frequent poverty monitoring over time. Without this, it would not be possible to document the lessons Uganda provides.

Comments

(Leave your comments here about this item.)

Item Analytics

Select desired time period