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Escaping from Poverty Trap: A Choice between Government Transfer Payments and Public Services

Chen, S.; Li, J.; Lu, S.; & Xiong, B. (2017). Escaping from Poverty Trap: A Choice between Government Transfer Payments and Public Services. Global Health Research and Policy, 2(15). PMCID: PMC5683608

Chen, S.; Li, J.; Lu, S.; & Xiong, B. (2017). Escaping from Poverty Trap: A Choice between Government Transfer Payments and Public Services. Global Health Research and Policy, 2(15). PMCID: PMC5683608

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Background:
Anti-poverty has always been an important issue to be settled. What policies should be selected to help individuals escaping from the poverty trap: by directly offering transfer payments or indirectly providing public services? This paper is among the first to explore the effects of public anti-poverty programs system in China.

Methods:
We Using unbalanced panel data of China Health and Nutrition Survey (CHNS) from 1989 to 2009, we demonstrate how the individual poverty status is determined through a four-staged simultaneous model. We choose the 3SLS (Three Staged Linear Squared) methodology to do the estimation.

Results:
GTPs (Government Transfer Payments) don't have positive effects on poverty reductions. The results demonstrate that GTPs increasing by 10% makes private transfer payments decrease by 3.9%. Meanwhile, GTPs increasing by 10% makes the household income decreased by 27.1%. However, public services (such as medical insurance, health services, hygiene protection etc.) have significantly positive impacts on poverty reduction. Public services share a part of living cost of the poor, and are conducive for people to gain higher household income.

Conclusions:
GTPs given by governments are not effective in reducing the poverty, as a result of "crowd-out effect" and "inductive effect". However, public services are suggested to be adopted by governments to help the poor out of the poverty trap.




JOUR



Chen, S.
Li, J.
Lu, S.
Xiong, B.



2017


Global Health Research and Policy

2

15









PMC5683608


2611