China has made huge economic strides in recent decades but
poverty is still a major issue on the agenda for rural China.
Poverty and Development in China analyses how poverty is recognized
and measured and how people in poverty are identified, literally
asking: who is poor in China? Lu Caizhen 's research compares four
approaches to poverty assessment: China 's official poverty
identification method, the participatory approach to poverty
assessment, the monetary approach, and use of multidimensional
poverty indicators. Each of these is applied to the same population
of households to identify the poor in rural Wuding County, Yunnan
Province.
The analysis shows that there is in fact very little overlap of
households identified as poor by the various means, and that choice
of approach does matter in the outcome of who is identified as
poor. This has implications at the theoretical, methodological, and
policy levels. Lu discusses these in detail, concluding that at
present, there is a need to shift away from poverty reduction
strategies that narrowly emphasize income generation activities, as
these are often short-term efforts. Instead, the focus should move
towards a broader combination of short-term and long-term
strategies to break poverty 's inter-linked structural causes.
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