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Rural and Urban Dynamics and Poverty: Evidence from China and India

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TLDR
This paper showed that the urban bias was greater in China than in India and that correcting this imbalance will not only contribute to higher rural growth, but also secure future urban growth (Fan and Chan-Kang 2005).
Abstract
"Like many developing countries, China and India followed development strategies biased in favor of the urban sector over the last several decades. These development schemes have led to overall efficiency losses due to misallocation of resources among rural and urban sectors. It also led to large income gaps between rural and urban areas. The urban bias was greater in China than in India. Indeed, official data show that both the income gap and the difference in poverty rates between rural and urban areas are much larger in China than in India. Both countries have corrected the rural-urban divide to some extent as part of reform processes. But the bias still exists. Other studies also support the idea presented here that correcting this imbalance will not only contribute to higher rural growth, but also secure future urban growth (Fan and Chan-Kang 2005). More important, correcting the urban bias will lead to larger reductions in poverty as well as more balanced growth across sectors and regions. Correcting a government's bias towards investment in urban areas is one of the most important policies to pursue." from Authors' Abstract

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The Role of Agriculture in Development: Implications for Sub-Saharan Africa

TL;DR: In this article, the authors synthesize both the traditional theoretical literature on agriculture's role in the development process and discusses more recent literature that remains skeptical about agriculture's development potential for Africa.
Journal ArticleDOI

Agriculture, Development, and Urban Bias

Dirk Bezemer, +1 more
- 01 Aug 2008 - 
TL;DR: In this paper, the causes and manifestations of urban bias for agricultural development in the least developed countries are studied, including discrimination in domestic pricing policies and in the international trade regime, decreasing financial support from LDC governments and aid donors, and increasing neglect of agriculture in development theory and economic research.
Posted Content

Agriculture, Development and Urban Bias

TL;DR: In this paper, the causes and manifestations of urban bias for agricultural development in the least developed countries are studied, including discrimination in domestic pricing policies and in the international trade regime, decreasing financial support from LDC governments and aid donors, and increasing neglect of agriculture in development theory and economic research.
Posted Content

Socio-economic differentials in child stunting are consistently larger in urban than rural areas

TL;DR: In this article, data from the Demographic and Health Surveys (DHS) for 11 countries from three regions were used to test the hypothesis that intra-urban differentials in child stunting were greater than intra-rural differentials, and that the prevalence of stunting among the urban and the rural poor was equally high.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Some Tests of Specification for Panel Data: Monte Carlo Evidence and an Application to Employment Equations.

TL;DR: In this article, the generalized method of moments (GMM) estimator optimally exploits all the linear moment restrictions that follow from the assumption of no serial correlation in the errors, in an equation which contains individual effects, lagged dependent variables and no strictly exogenous variables.
Report SeriesDOI

Initial conditions and moment restrictions in dynamic panel data models

TL;DR: In this paper, two alternative linear estimators that are designed to improve the properties of the standard first-differenced GMM estimator are presented. But both estimators require restrictions on the initial conditions process.
Journal ArticleDOI

China's (uneven) progress against poverty

TL;DR: This article showed that rural economic growth was far more important to national poverty reduction than urban economic growth, and that rural areas accounted for the bulk of the gains to the poor, though migration to urban areas helped.