Argentina faces persistently high poverty rates, which have shown an upward trend in recent years, despite increased resources aimed at mitigating poverty.
Authors
- Citation
- “ World Bank . 2024 . Poverty Traps in Argentina - Poverty and Equity Assessment . © Washington, DC: World Bank . http://hdl.handle.net/10986/42400 License: CC BY-NC 3.0 IGO . ”
- Collection(s)
- Poverty Assessment Spanish PDFs Available
- DOI
- https://doi.org/10.1596/42400
- Identifier externaldocumentum
- 34414817
- Identifier internaldocumentum
- 34414817
- Pages
- 58
- Published in
- United States of America
- Region country
- Argentina
- Report
- 194449
- Rights
- CC BY-NC 3.0 IGO
- Rights Holder
- World Bank
- Rights URI
- https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/igo
- UNIT
- EFI-LCR-POV-Poverty and Equity (ELCPV)
- URI
- https://hdl.handle.net/10986/42400
- date disclosure
- 2024-11-11
- region administrative
- Latin America & Caribbean
- theme
- Inclusive Growth,Mitigation,Economic Policy,Social Protection,Social Development and Protection,Economic Growth and Planning,Environment and Natural Resource Management,Climate change,Social protection delivery systems
Files
Table of Contents
- Acknowledgments 8
- Executive Summary 9
- Overcoming poverty traps 15
- Poverty persists despite the implementation of strengthened policies aimed at reducing it 9
- Trap 1. Fiscal imbalance and inflation: a vicious cycle that limits allocative efficiency 11
- Trap 2. Intergenerational and geographical imbalances leading to chronic poverty 12
- Trap 3. Spiral of low productivity and income vulnerability 13
- Trap 4. Increasing climate risks and limited capacity for resilience 14
- Chapter 17
- 1 17
- 1.1 Poverty has increased in Argentina, while it has declined in most countries in the region 17
- 2.1. An assets approach to analyzing household income generation 29
- 1.5. Better data are needed for more efficient policy impact 27
- 1.4. Official poverty measurements cover only part of the country’s population 24
- 1.3. Poverty is concentrated among children, youth, and geographically in the suburbs and northern regions 21
- 1.2. The poverty floor has persisted for four decades in Argentina, and the country faces a new recent cycle of deterioration 19
- 2.9. Wages have lost value amid inflation and volatility 43
- 2.8 Lack of stable job creation hinders labor productivity 40
- 2.7. Restrictions affect market participation and asset use 39
- 2.6. Low-income population is more vulnerable to adverse climate events 39
- 2.5. Structural barriers and economic distortions affect productive capital accumulation 37
- 2.4. Social capital: A subtle yet crucial asset 36
- 2.3. Accumulation of human capital and productive assets is insufficient and of low quality 31
- 2.2. Labor income is the largest component of total household income 30
- Chapter 44
- 3 44
- Policy responses and poverty traps 44
- 3.1. Income transfer programs have been the cornerstone of anti-poverty policy 44
- 3.2. The limits of income transfer policies: building solid walls on quicksand 47
- 3.3. The complexity of transforming the lives of the most vulnerable 48
- 3.4. Overcoming poverty traps: a short- and medium-term strategy 49
- 3.4.1. Macroeconomic stabilization and inflation reduction: Essential foundations 50
- 3.4.2. Protection mechanisms during economic stabilization 50
- 3.4.3. Overcoming structural barriers 50
- 3.4.4. Information for efficiently addressing diverse needs 50
- References 51
- Figure 1 9
- Poverty levels—measured using the national methodology—have remained above 25 % over the past decades 9
- Figure 2 10
- Average per capita household income declined by over 40 percent between 2016 and 2023 10
- Figure 3 10
- Labor income is the largest component of total income, primarily from vulnerable employment in middle and lower segments 10
- Figure 4 11
- Food prices have often outpaced headline inflation 11
- Figure 5 12
- More than half of children and adolescents live in poverty 12
- Figure 6 13
- Half of all workers are informal or self-employed 13
- Figure 7 13
- In certain provinces, formal private employment constitutes less than 20 percent of total employment 13
- Figure 8 14
- Number of poverty baskets affordable to workers earning the median wage, by type of employment and quarter, 2016–2023 14
- Figure 9 15
- High flood risk and chronic poverty rates converge in specific territories 15
- Figure 10 18
- The poverty rate in Argentina is low compared to the region but has increased in the last decade 18
- Figure 11 18
- Real per capita income has declined for the general population and the bottom 40 percent in Argentina 18
- Figure 12 19
- The middle class in Argentina declined over the past decade 19
- Figure 13 19
- Inequality has remained relatively stable at a level below regional average 19
- Figure 14 20
- The official measurement shows four in ten Argentines in major urban areas living in poverty; one in ten living in extreme poverty 20
- Figure 15 21
- Limited economic growth largely accounts for rising poverty rates 21
- Figure 17 21
- Reductions in formal and nonformal labor income explain 60 percent of the increase in poverty between 2016 and 2023 21
- Figure 18 22
- Poverty rates are highest among households with children, particularly in extended households and female-headed households 22
- Figure 19 22
- Poverty incidence is higher among women in the 24-44 age group 22
- Figure 20 23
- Poverty concentration is higher in suburbs surrounding the City of Buenos Aires 23
- Figure 21 23
- Poverty measurement in Argentina is limited to 31 urban areas, with higher incidence in the North and Greater Buenos Aires regions 23
- Figure 22 25
- In most provinces, poverty date cover less than half the population 25
- Figure 23 25
- The prevalence of unmet basic needs is higher among the rural population 25
- Figure 24 30
- Household income-generating capacity depends on available assets, asset utilization, and the obtained returns to use 30
- Figure 25 31
- The share of labor income and pensions has decreased over the last decade 31
- Figure 26 33
- Vulnerable populations have lower early education attendance and higher dropout rates 33
- Figure 27 33
- Children and young people form a higher proportion of the most vulnerable groups 33
- Figure 28 34
- Higher parental education levels correlate with fewer students falling behind in school 34
- Figure 29 34
- Average school performance is low in Argentina, especially for low-income populations 34
- Figure 30 36
- Deficits in health checkups are most prevalent among children from disadvantaged households 36
- Figure 31 37
- Lack of internet connectivity is a barrier in northern regions 37
- Figure 32 38
- Low-income households have limited productive asset accumulation and rental income 38
- Figure 33 38
- Motorcycles are key productive assets among low-income populations 38
- Figure 34 40
- Informal employment dominates among the poorest two quintiles, concentrated in construction, retail, manufacturing and domestic services 40
- Figure 35 41
- The number of private sector employers reporting workers has remained stagnant for over a decade 41
- Figure 36 42
- Map of chronic poverty estimates related to private employment and Potenciar Trabajo program, 2019-2021 42
- Figure 37 43
- Most of the firms that manage to stay in business retain their original size five years after establishment 43
- Figure 38 43
- Average wages decreased by 40 percent between 2016 and 2023, with informal workers most affected 43
- Figure 39 45
- Pension moratoria17 represent the largest expenditure on noncontributory transfers 45
- Figure 40 46
- Spending on transfer programs for the elderly is almost 3 times that for children and adolescents 46