Why Is Child Malnutrition Lower in Urban Than Rural Areas? Evidence from 36 Developing Countries

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Why Is Child Malnutrition Lower in Urban Than Rural Areas? Evidence from 36 Developing Countries FCNDP No. 176 FCND DISCUSSION PAPER NO. 176 WHY IS CHILD MALNUTRITION LOWER IN URBAN THAN RURAL AREAS? EVIDENCE FROM 36 DEVELOPING COUNTRIES Lisa C. Smith, Marie T. Ruel, and Aida Ndiaye Food Consumption and Nutrition Division International Food Policy Research Institute 2033 K Street, N.W. Washington, D.C. 20006 U.S.A. (202) 862–5600 Fax: (202) 467–4439 March 2004 Copyright © 2004 International Food Policy Research Institute FCND Discussion Papers contain preliminary material and research results, and are circulated prior to a full peer review in order to stimulate discussion and critical comment. It is expected that most Discussion Papers will eventually be published in some other form, and that their content may also be revised. ii Abstract While ample evidence documents that urban children generally have better nutritional status than their rural counterparts, recent research suggests that urban malnutrition is on the rise. The environment, choices, and opportunities of urbanites differ greatly from those of rural dwellers—from employment conditions to social and family networks to access to health care and other services. Given these differences, understanding the relative importance of the various determinants of child malnutrition in urban and rural areas—and especially whether they differ—is key to designing context- relevant, effective program and policy responses for stemming malnutrition. This study uses Demographic and Health Survey data from 36 developing countries to address the question of whether the socioeconomic determinants of child nutritional status differ across urban and rural areas. The purpose is to answer the broader question of why child malnutrition rates are lower in urban areas. The socioeconomic determinants examined are women’s education, women’s status, access to safe water and sanitation, and household economic status. The analysis finds little evidence of differences in the nature of the socioeconomic determinants or in the strength of their associations with child nutritional status across urban and rural areas. As expected, however, it documents marked differences in the levels of these determinants in favor of urban areas. Large gaps in favor of urban areas are also found in the levels of key proximate determinants of child nutritional status, especially maternal prenatal and birthing care, quality of complementary feeding, and immunization of children. The conclusion is that better nutritional status of urban children is probably due to the cumulative effect of a series of more favorable socioeconomic conditions, which, in turn, seems to lead to better caring practices for children and their mothers. Given that the nature of the determinants of child nutritional status is largely the same across urban and rural areas, the same program and policy framework can be used to stem malnutrition in both. Efforts to alleviate the most critical socioeconomic constraints specific to the different environments should continue to be prioritized. iii Contents Acknowledgments............................................................................................................... v 1. Introduction.................................................................................................................... 1 2. Data and Analytical Strategy ......................................................................................... 3 Data......................................................................................................................... 3 Measures of Proximal and Socioeconomic Determinants of Child Nutritional Status ................................................................................................. 6 Analytical Strategy................................................................................................ 12 3. Results.......................................................................................................................... 15 Urban-Rural Differences in Childhood Malnutrition ........................................... 15 Urban-Rural Differences in the Effects of the Socioeconomic Determinants...... 16 Urban-Rural Differences in the Levels of the Socioeconomic Determinants....... 22 Urban-Rural Differences in the Levels of the Proximal Determinants................. 24 4. Discussion and Conclusions ........................................................................................ 28 Why Is Child Malnutrition Lower in Urban than Rural Areas? ........................... 28 Limitations of the Study........................................................................................ 30 Policy Implications ............................................................................................... 31 References......................................................................................................................... 33 Tables 1 Study countries, sample sizes, and percentage of children living in urban areas ......... 5 2 Measures of determinants of child nutritional status .................................................... 7 3 Comparison of child nutritional status across urban and rural areas, by country and region.................................................................................................................... 15 4 Determinants of child height-for-age Z-scores: Urban-rural differences .................. 18 5 Determinants of child weight-for-height Z-scores: Urban-rural differences............. 19 iv 6 Comparison of socioeconomic determinants of child nutritional status across urban and rural areas, by region.................................................................................. 23 7 Comparison of proximate determinants of child nutritional status across urban and rural areas, by region............................................................................................ 25 Figures 1 Stunting prevalences across urban and rural areas, by region .................................... 16 2 Wasting prevalences across urban and rural areas, by region .................................... 17 v Acknowledgments This research is an extension of a larger project examining the determinants of child malnutrition in developing countries that was generously funded by the Swedish International Development Agency. We thank the other project researchers, Usha Ramakrishnan, Lawrence Haddad, and Reynaldo Martorell, as well as all those who assisted in the construction of the multicountry data set: Denise Zabkiewicz, Sonu Khera, Heather Hustad, Morgan Hickey, Julia Hendrickson, Raymond Dogore, and Yasmin Ali. We also thank Agnes Quisumbing for her insightful review of this manuscript. Lisa C. Smith and Marie T. Ruel International Food Policy Research Institute Aida Ndiaye Consultant Key words: child nutritional status, malnutrition, urban, rural, Demographic and Health Survey data 1 1. Introduction Ample evidence shows that urban children generally have a better nutritional status than their rural counterparts (Hussain and Lundven 1987; von Braun et al. 1993; Ruel et al. 1998; Ruel 2001). This is particularly true for linear growth (stunting)1 and for underweight (low weight-for-age). Using Food and Agricultural Organization of the United Nations (FAO) data for 11 countries, most of which were African, Hussain and Lundven (1987) showed that stunting rates in urban areas were 55–78 percent of those in rural areas. Von Braun et al. (1993) corroborated these findings with United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) data sets from 33 countries in Africa, Asia, and the Americas, showing that, on average, stunting was 1.6 times greater in rural than in urban areas. Using Demographic and Health Surveys (DHS) from 28 countries conducted between 1990 and 1998, Ruel (2001) also documented the consistently lower prevalence of stunting in urban areas, with wider urban-rural differences in Latin America than in Africa and Asia.2 For five of the seven Latin American countries studied, stunting prevalence in urban areas was about half that found in rural areas. Although, typically, wasting is also higher in rural areas, most studies have found very small urban-rural differences. In a few instances, slightly higher wasting in urban areas has been reported (Ruel et al. 1998; Ruel 2001; von Braun et al. 1993; Hussain and Lundven 1987). In spite of the overall nutritional advantage of children in urban areas, recent evidence suggests that urban poverty and malnutrition have been increasing, both in absolute and in relative terms (Haddad, Ruel, and Garrett 1999). Data from nine of 14 countries studied show that both the number of underweight preschoolers and the share of urban preschoolers in overall numbers of underweight children have been increasing in 1 Linear growth refers to growth in height. Stunting is defined as a height-for-age lower than –2 SD from the median of the CDC/WHO reference population (WHO 1979). Underweight is defined as a weight-for- age lower than –2 SD from the median of the reference population; wasting is defined as a weight-for- height lower than –2 SD. 2 This analysis included 18 countries from Africa, 7 from Latin America, and 3 from South Asia (Bangladesh, Nepal, and Pakistan). 2 the past 10–15 years.3 These nine countries constitute a large percentage of the developing world, given that they include China, Nigeria, Egypt, and the Philippines. Thus, although childhood malnutrition has typically been a less severe problem in urban than in rural areas, the accelerated rates of urbanization
Recommended publications
  • Urban and Rural Poverty Areas
    Urban and Rural Poverty Areas The Developmental Disabilities Assistance and Bill of Rights Act of 2000, P.L. 106‐402, includes two references to “urban and rural poverty areas” in SUBTITLE B‐‐FEDERAL ASSISTANCE TO STATE DEVELOPMENTAL DISABILITIES COUNCILS. The references are: 42 USC 15024 SEC. 124(C)(5)(E) State Plan (E) URBAN AND RURAL POVERTY AREAS. ‐The plan shall provide assurances that special financial and technical assistance will be given to organizations that provide community services, individualized supports, and other forms of assistance to individuals with developmental disabilities who live in areas designated as urban or rural poverty areas 42 USC 15026 SEC. 126. FEDERAL AND NON‐FEDERAL SHARE (a) AGGREGATE COST. ‐ (2) URBAN OR RURAL POVERTY AREAS. ‐In the case of projects whose activities or products target individuals with developmental disabilities who live in urban or rural poverty areas, as determined by the Secretary, the Federal share of the cost of all such projects may not be more than 90 percent of the aggregate necessary cost of such projects, as determined by the Secretary. Definition of Poverty In August 1969, the U.S. Bureau of the Budget (the predecessor of the U.S. Office of Management and Budget) designated the Census Bureau poverty thresholds as the federal government’s official statistical definition of poverty. * According to Bureau of the Census Statistical Brief/95‐13, in 1990, more than 1 in 5 Americans – or 52 million – lived in a “poverty area.” Poverty areas are census tracts or block numbering areas (BNAs) where at least 20 percent of residents were poor in 1989.
    [Show full text]
  • Understanding Rural Poverty in the United States Madhura Swaminathan*
    BOOK REVIEW Understanding Rural Poverty in the United States Madhura Swaminathan* Tickamyer, Ann R., Sherman, Jennifer, and Warlick, Jennifer (eds.) (2017), Rural Poverty in the United States, Columbia University Press, New York, pp. 476, USD 40. This book, written by a group of American sociologists, is based on careful quantitative analysis and cartography. It is in five parts. The first part is on the geography and demography of the rural population of the United States (US). The rural population of the US today exceeds 50 million and is spread geographically over 75 per cent of the area of the country. The definition of rural in the United States is essentially that which is not urban. Specifically, counties, the basic unit of government, are classified as either metropolitan or non-metropolitan (or rural). A metropolitan county is one “with an urban core (city) population of 50,000 or more residents, along with adjacent counties (the suburbs) that link to the urban core by commuting patterns.” There are 1,090 metropolitan counties and 2,051 non-metropolitan counties in the country. The first chapter by Kenneth Johnson brings out two distinctive features of change in respect of the rural population: ageing and diversifying in terms of minorities. While the rural population is still predominantly white with clear pockets of African Americans and Hispanics, the Census data point to a rise in ethnic and racial diversity over the last two decades. The next chapter by Bruce Weber and Kathleen Miller maps changes in rural poverty over the last century. The official poverty measure (OPM) in the US, developed by the Census Bureau, is based on a 1960s estimate of the cost of a minimum adequate diet (adjusted for family size and composition).
    [Show full text]
  • Anna Fadeeva A) Poverty in Bangladesh
    Anna Fadeeva A comparative study of poverty in China, India, Bangladesh, and Philippines. Under review in: University of South California Research Paper Series in Sociology a) Poverty in Bangladesh Banladesh is one of the world's most densely populated countries with 150 million people, 26% of whom live below the national poverty line of US $2 per day. In addition, child malnutrition rates are currently at 48%, in condition that is tied to the low social status of women in Bangladeshi society. While Bangladesh suffers from many problems such as poor infrastructure, political instability, corruption, and insufficient power supplies, the country's economy has grown 5-6% per year since 1996. However, Bangladesh still remains a poor, overpopulated, and inefficiently-governed nation with about 45% of the Bangladeshis being employed in the agriculture sector. Rural and urban poverty The World Bank announced in June 2013 that Bangladesh had reduced the number of people living in poverty from 63 million in 2000 to 47 million in 2010, despite a total population that had grown to approximately 150 million. This means that Bangladesh will reach its first United Nations-established Millennium Development Goal, that of poverty reduction, two years ahead of the 2015 deadline. Bangladesh is also making progress in reducing its poverty rate to 26 percent of the population. Since the 1990s, there has been a declining trend of poverty by 1 percent each year, with the help of international assistance. According to the 2010 household survey by the Bangladesh Bureau of Statistics, 17.6 percent of the population were found to be under the poverty line.
    [Show full text]
  • Rural Poverty Reduction in the 21St Century Policy in Focus Is a Regular Publication of the International Policy Centre for Inclusive Growth (IPC-IG)
    A publication of The International Policy Centre for Inclusive Growth Volume 16, Issue No. 1 • April 2019 Rural poverty reduction in the 21st century Policy in Focus is a regular publication of the International Policy Centre for Inclusive Growth (IPC-IG). The International Policy Centre for Inclusive Growth (IPC-IG) is a Some of the photographs used in this publication are licensed under partnership between the United Nations and the Government of Brazil to The Creative Commons license; full attribution and links to the individual promote South–South learning on social policies. The Centre specialises licenses are provided for each. in research-based policy recommendations to foster the reduction of Specialist Guest Editors: Ryan Nehring, Cornell University and Ana Paula de poverty and inequality as well as promote inclusive growth. The IPC-IG is la O Campos, Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO) linked to the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) in Brazil, the Ministry of Economy (ME) and the Institute for Applied Economic In-house Editor: Manoel Salles Research (Ipea) of the Government of Brazil. Publications Manager: Roberto Astorino Director a.i.: Niky Fabiancic Copy Editor: Jon Stacey, The Write Effect Ltd. IPC-IG Research Coordinators: Diana Sawyer; Fábio Veras Soares; Rafael Guerreiro Osorio and Sergei Soares Art and Desktop Publishing: Flávia Amaral and Rosa Maria Banuth The views expressed in IPC-IG Publications are solely those of the authors Cover art: Mosaic produced by the IPC-IG Publications Team, composed and should not be taken as representing the views of their respective of photographs by (from left to right, top to bottom) Andrea Moroni, institutions, the United Nations Development Programme, Asian Development Bank, Deanna Ramsay/CIFOR, Axel Fassio/CIFOR and or the Government of Brazil.
    [Show full text]
  • Japanese Overseas School) in Belgium: Implications for Developing Multilingual Speakers in Japan
    Language Ideologies on the Language Curriculum and Language Teaching in a Nihonjingakkō (Japanese overseas school) in Belgium: Implications for Developing Multilingual Speakers in Japan Yuta Mogi Thesis submitted in fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy UCL-Institute of Education 2020 1 Statement of originality I, Yuta Mogi confirm that the work presented in this thesis is my own. Where confirmation has been derived from other sources, I confirm that this has been indicated in the thesis. Yuta Mogi August, 2020 Signature: ……………………………………………….. Word count (exclusive of list of references, appendices, and Japanese text): 74,982 2 Acknowledgements First and foremost, I would like to express my sincere gratitude to my supervisor, Dr. Siân Preece. Her insights, constant support, encouragement, and unwavering kindness made it possible for me to complete this thesis, which I never believed I could. With her many years of guidance, she has been very influential in my growth as a researcher. Words are inadequate to express my gratitude to participants who generously shared their stories and thoughts with me. I am also indebted to former teachers of the Japanese overseas school, who undertook the roles of mediators between me and the research site. Without their support in the crucial initial stages of my research, completion of this thesis would not have been possible. In addition, I am grateful to friends and colleagues who were willing readers and whose critical, constructive comments helped me at various stages of the research and writing process. Although it is impossible to mention them all, I would like to take this opportunity to offer my special thanks to the following people: Tomomi Ohba, Keiko Yuyama, Takako Yoshida, Will Simpson, Kio Iwai, and Chuanning Huang.
    [Show full text]
  • Rural Poverty Research Center Rural Poverty Research Center
    RRural PPoverty RResearch CCenter Research Brief 2004-1 March 2004 What the Research says about… Spatial Variations in Factors Affecting Poverty Jane M. Mosley and Kathleen K. Miller1 RUPRI Rural Poverty Research Center Introduction and Overview There is abundant research that focuses on the causes and consequences of poverty in rural2 areas, and on the factors that ameliorate rural poverty. While a comprehensive review of this literature is not possible in this space, we summarize the research on differences in poverty between rural and urban areas, and how factors that ameliorate poverty differ between rural and urban areas. We focus primarily on studies that are national in scale, and that looked specifically at these spatial differences and Figure 1. Poverty Rate by Rural Urban Continuum Code, 1999 18.0 effects. Metro Counties Nonmetro Counties 16.0 14.0 Both rural people and rural 12.0 10.0 places are disadvantaged relative to 8.0 their urban counterparts. Although a Poverty Rate (%) Rate Poverty 6.0 4.0 larger portion of the poor population 2.0 0.0 0123456789 resides in urban areas, poverty rates Rural Urban Continuum Code Source: U.S. Census Bureau and ERS, USDA 1 Authors are Research Assistant Professor, Truman School of Public Affairs, and Program Director, Rural Policy Research Institute at the University of Missouri. The authors wish to thank Leif Jensen, Bruce Weber, and Monica Fisher for extremely helpful comments, and Erica Hauck for research assistance. 2 We use the terms “rural” and “nonmetropolitan” and “urban” and “metropolitan” interchangeably, but are aware of the difficulties of using the terms this way.
    [Show full text]
  • COVID-19 and Rural Poverty: Supporting and Protecting the Rural Poor in Times of Pandemic
    28 April 2020 COVID-19 and rural poverty: Supporting and protecting the rural poor in times of pandemic KEY MESSAGES: • While physical distance, relative isolation and lower population density play in favour for rural areas in terms of the direct impact of COVID-19, as the contagion spreads rural areas are increasingly hard hit. • Rural areas are much less prepared to deal with the direct and indirect impact of the crisis. Of the 734 million extreme poor prior to the COVID-19 crisis, 80 percent live in rural areas. Of these, 76 percent work in agriculture. Rural inhabitants have dramatically less access to adequate sanitation, health services, education, internet and communications technology, social protection and public infrastructure. • The challenges in accessing health services and health information faced by the rural poor in normal times will be intensified. Those with health conditions are more likely to be infected and affected by the virus, making the rural poor – who have higher rates of chronic conditions as well as less diverse diets that undermine the body’s immunities to illness – even more vulnerable. • Economic activity in rural areas, particularly in developing countries, whether in self- employment or in wage labour, is primarily informal. In agriculture and rural areas, more than 80 percent of the self-employed are informal, and in developing countries more than 90 percent of workers in the agricultural sector are informal (ILO, 2018). Rural workers are excluded for the most part from employment related social protection, including social insurance or employment guarantees, if they exist in rural areas. Casual day labourers are the poorest of the poor in most rural areas of the developing world, and they will be the hardest hit in terms of lost income.
    [Show full text]
  • The Feminization of Poverty: Rural Appalachia and Beyond
    THE FEMINIZATION OF POVERTY: RURAL APPALACHIA AND BEYOND by Holly Gallagher Honors Thesis Appalachian State University Submitted to the Department of Government and Justice Studies and The Honors College in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Bachelor of Science December 2019 Approved by: ____________________________________________________ Nancy Love, Ph.D., Thesis Director ____________________________________________________ Janice Rienerth, Ph.D., Second Reader ____________________________________________________ Ellen Key, Ph.D., Departmental Honors Director ____________________________________________________ Jefford Vahlbusch, Ph.D., Dean, The Honors College Abstract Women living in rural Appalachia are faced with a unique set of barriers, causing poverty to impact them differently in comparison to their male counterparts and the nation surrounding them. The notion of women being more harshly affected by poverty is frequently referred to as “the feminization of poverty,” a topic which is further discussed in this research. The feminization of poverty is present for women all around the United States and has been pervasive for centuries. Pervasive hardship is also a characteristic of the Appalachian region, which has historically faced extreme poverty and unemployment rates, along with overall economic instability. The portrayal of these and other problems present in Appalachia have led to societally ingrained stereotypes and assumptions about the region, which this research clarifies and explains. This research primarily focuses on women in rural communities within Appalachia, connecting the feminization of poverty to the exacerbation of rural poverty, raising questions of What policy-based action has been effective in the past, what can we expect for the future, and What the poverty of women in the region says for the United States as a whole.
    [Show full text]
  • Rural Poverty Among Women in Nigeria
    Journal of Sustainable Development in Africa (Volume 22, No.3, 2020) ISSN: 1520-5509 Clarion University of Pennsylvania, Clarion, Pennsylvania RURAL POVERTY AMONG WOMEN IN NIGERIA Olukemi Ajibke Aluko and Kike Mbada Obafemi Awolowo University, Nigeria ABSTRACT This paper examined poverty among rural women in Nigeria with a view to identifying why poverty persists among this population. The paper adopted education, employment and earning as variables for discussions. Secondary data were sourced from the surveys of the World Bank, International Labour Organisation and the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS) from 2000 to 2019. The data revealed that though both sexes were given the equal opportunity for access to education, literacy rate among females in the rural areas is less compared to males due to drop-outs rate of females in upper secondary school which subsequently affects their choice of employment. Also, majority of rural women engage in non-farming sector which either does not resulted in high income or any stable financial rewards for them. The paper concludes that although formal education is essential, informal education should be strategically encouraged (based on the culture and beliefs of the people) in a way that enables them to build networks and obtain information needed to empower themselves to be lifted out of poverty. Keywords: Sustainable development, Poverty, Capability Approach, Multidimensional poverty, labour. Education Feminization of poverty and Rural Areas 82 INTRODUCTION Poverty is one of the longest-standing problems facing governments and populations throughout the world (Yunus, 2011). Its multidimensional nature makes it problematic for all facets of human life and its effects can be catastrophic to man and his environment (Pogge, & Rippin, 2013).
    [Show full text]
  • An Economic Analysis of the Relationship of Poverty and Income Inequality in Rural West Virginia
    AN EMPIRICAL ANALYSIS OF POVERTY AND INCOME INEQUALITY IN WEST VIRGINIA Semoa C. B. De Sousa-Brown, Graduate Research Assistant Tesfa G. Gebremedhin, Professor Divisison of Resource Management Devis College of Agriculture, Forestry & Consumer Sciences P.O. Box 6109 West Virginia University Morgantown, WV 26505-6108 Selected Paper prepared for presentation at the American Agricultural Economics Association Annual Meetings, Denver, Colorado, August 1-4, 2004 Copyright 2004 by Semoa De Sousa-Brown, Tesfa Gebremedhin. All rights reserved. Readers may make verbatim copies of this document for non-commercial purposes by any means, provided that this copyright notice appears on all such copies. AN EMPIRICAL ANALYSIS OF POVERTY AND INCOME INEQUALITY IN WEST VIRGINIA ABSTRACT OLS and 2SLS regressions and cross-sectional county data are used to examine the major determinants of poverty and income inequality in rural counties of West Virginia. The empirical findings confirm the possibility of simultaneity between poverty and income inequality. Poverty is the main determinant of increased levels of income inequality. KEY WORDS: Rural Poverty, Income Inequality AN EMPIRICAL ANALYSIS OF POVERTY AND INCOME INEQUALITY IN WEST VIRGINIA INTRODUCTION West Virginia is second, after Mississippi, in the nation in terms of the incidence of poverty, and it lags behind the nation and the Appalachian region for most economic indicators. High rates of poverty, high unemployment rates, low human capital formation, and population out-migration, especially by young college graduates, are the general features of rural life in West Virginia (Dilger and Witt, 1994). The slow or negative growth in income and employment in the state, the population loss and the disappearance of rural households are both causes and effects of the persistently high rates of poverty with repercussions for the economic and social well-being of the rural population, the health of local business, and the ability of the local governments to provide basic services (Cushing and Rogers, 1996).
    [Show full text]
  • The Remedial Japanese Language Classroom As an Ethnic Project 日本の補習言語教育と市民権 民 族的課題としての第二言語教室
    Volume 11 | Issue 32 | Number 3 | Article ID 3980 | Aug 08, 2013 The Asia-Pacific Journal | Japan Focus Separate and Unequal: The Remedial Japanese Language Classroom as an Ethnic Project 日本の補習言語教育と市民権 民 族的課題としての第二言語教室 Robert Moorehead education until they enter high school, at which time students are sorted into academic and The economic downturn of the Great Recession vocational schools with differing curricular has largely brought an end to the wave of emphases and degrees of prestige (LeTendre, ethnic return migration of Japanese South Hofer, and Shimizu 2003; Shimizu 1992, 2001; Americans to Japan, a wave that began in the Shimizu et al. 1999; Tsuneyoshi 1996, 2001). late 1980s. By 2012, the number of South However, the presence of immigrant children is American residents in Japan had dropped by challenging this Japanese educational model of more than a third, contributing to the shrinking equality and inclusion. of the foreign resident population in Japan to the lowest level since 2005 (Ministry of Justice To meet the needs of immigrant children, 2013). This emigration wave from Japan has Japanese public schools have created separate been encouraged by growth in the Brazilian JSL classrooms for students who require economy and by financial incentives from the remedial language training. These classrooms Japanese government for Japanese South break with Japanese educational practices by Americans and their family members to leave pulling students out of their homeroom classes the country. However, despite these changes, for remedial lessons, instead of having all the number of non-Japanese children in students complete the same lessons together. Japanese public schools who require remedial Teachers contend that the JSL classrooms help in Japanese remains high.
    [Show full text]
  • The Influence of Women's Empowerment on Poverty Reduction in the Rural Areas of Bangladesh
    International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health Article The Influence of Women’s Empowerment on Poverty Reduction in the Rural Areas of Bangladesh: Focus on Health, Education and Living Standard Wei Wei 1,†, Tanwne Sarker 1,*,† , Wioletta Zukiewicz-Sobczak˙ 2,* , Rana Roy 3 , G. M. Monirul Alam 4 , Md. Ghulam Rabbany 5,6, Mohammad Shakhawat Hossain 5,7 and Noshaba Aziz 8 1 School of Economics and Finance, Xi’an Jiaotong University, Xi’an 710049, China; [email protected] 2 Department of Food and Nutrition, Calisia University, 62-800 Kalisz, Poland 3 Department of Agroforestry & Environmental Science, Sylhet Agricultural University, Sylhet 3100, Bangladesh; [email protected] 4 Department of Agribusiness, Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujibur Rahman Agricultural University, Gazipur 1706, Bangladesh; [email protected] 5 College of Economics and Management, Northwest A&F University, Yangling 712100, China; [email protected] (M.G.R.); [email protected] (M.S.H.) 6 Department of Agribusiness and Marketing, Sher-e-Bangla Agricultural University, Dhaka 1207, Bangladesh 7 Economic Development and Value Chain Specialist, World Vision Bangladesh, BleNGS Project, Jamalpur 2000, Bangladesh 8 College of Economics and Management, Nanjing Agricultural University, Nanjing 210095, China; [email protected] * Correspondence: [email protected] or [email protected] (T.S.); Citation: Wei, W.; Sarker, T.; [email protected] (W.Z.-S.)˙ ˙ Zukiewicz-Sobczak, W.; Roy, R.; † These authors have contributed equally to this work and are joint co-first authors. Alam, G.M.M.; Rabbany, M.G.; Hossain, M.S.; Aziz, N. The Influence Abstract: Women’s empowerment has a great influence on health, nutrition, education, and the of Women’s Empowerment on overall well-being of societies as well as of the children and households.
    [Show full text]