The impact of the international economic crisis on child poverty in South Africa

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Authors

Decaluwe, Bernard
Mabugu, Ramos
Maisonnave, Helene
Robichaud, Veronique
Shepherd, Debra
Van der Berg, Servaas
Von Fintel, Dieter

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Publisher

University of Pretoria, Department of Economics

Abstract

This paper reports on a study to provide insights into the magnitude of the shocks associated with the recent global economic crisis in macroeconomic terms in South Africa, the country’s capacity to withstand or cushion these shocks, and the extent of fragility in terms of poverty levels and child wellbeing. The analysis combines macroeconomic and micro-economic tools to assess the extent of the crisis’ impact on the country. The study finds that the poverty headcount ratio increases little in the moderate crisis scenario, but substantially under the severe scenario. However, under both scenarios there is a relatively successful return to close to the business as usual trend. It is important to note though that under both scenarios, more poverty sensitive measures (the poverty gap ratio and the poverty severity ratio) decline more, and remain in negative territory longer, showing that the major impact of the crisis is on the poorest, and that this impact is most difficult to overcome.

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Keywords

Child poverty

Sustainable Development Goals

Citation

Chitiga, M, Decaluwe, B, Mabugu, R, Maisonnave, H, Robichaud, V, Shepherd, D, Van der Berg, S & Von Fintel, D 2010, 'The impact of the international economic crisis on child poverty in South Africa', University of Pretoria, Department of Economics, Working paper series, no. 2010-15. [http://web.up.ac.za/default.asp?ipkCategoryID=736&sub=1&parentid=677&subid=729&ipklookid=3]