Seasonal Poverty and Seasonal Migration in Asia
journal contribution
posted on 2020-03-16, 00:00 authored by A Mushfiq Mobarak, M Emy Reimão© 2020 Asian Development Bank and Asian Development Bank Institute. Four in five poor people in the Asia and Pacific region live in rural areas. Crop cycles in agrarian areas create periods of seasonal deprivation, or preharvest “lean seasons,” when work is scarce and skipped meals become frequent. In this paper, we document this phenomenon of seasonal poverty and discuss existing formal mechanisms for coping with it. We then focus on seasonal migration from rural to urban areas as a potential coping strategy and review the evidence on the effects of encouraging seasonal migration through transport subsidies. Over the past 10 years, we have conducted a series of randomized control trials in Bangladesh and Indonesia that provided rural agricultural workers with small migration subsidies to pay for the cost of round-trip travel to nearby areas in search of work. This paper summarizes the lessons learned from this multicountry, multiyear series of seasonal migration trials, the implications of these results for spatial misallocation, urbanization, and growth, and the replicability and relevance of this and other policies encouraging domestic migration more broadly for other areas in the Asia and Pacific region.
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Journal
Asian Development ReviewVolume
37Pagination
1-42Location
Manila, PhilippinesPublisher DOI
Open access
- Yes
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ISSN
0116-1105Language
eng.Publication classification
C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal, C Journal articleIssue
1Publisher
Asian Development BankUsage metrics
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