CAROLINE O(cid:1).N. MOSER, EDITOR REDUCING GLOBAL POVERTY t h e c a s e f o r a s s e t ac c u m u l at i o n 5857-0 ch00 frontmatter 3/9/07 4:02 PM Page i reducing global poverty 5857-0 ch00 frontmatter 3/9/07 4:02 PM Page ii 5857-0 ch00 frontmatter 3/9/07 4:02 PM Page iii reducing global poverty The Case for Asset Accumulation caroline moser Editor brookings institution press Washington, D.C. 5857-0 ch00 frontmatter 3/9/07 4:02 PM Page iv Copyright © 2007 the brookings institution 1775 Massachusetts Avenue, N.W., Washington, D.C. 20036 www.brookings.edu All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means without permission in writing from the Brookings Institution Press. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication data Reducing global poverty : the case for asset accumulation / Caroline O. N. Moser, editor. p. cm. This volume grew out of the Brookings Institution–Ford Foundation Workshop on Asset-Based Approaches to Poverty Reduction in a Globalized Context, held in Washington, D.C., on June 27–28, 2006, led by Caroline Moser and co-hosted by the Ford Foundation. Summary: “Provides a set of case studies of asset-building projects around the globe aimed at designing and implementing public policies that will increase the capital assets of the poor. Highlights the ways in which poor households and communities can move out of poverty through longer-term accumulation of capital assets”—Provided by publisher. Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN-13: 978-0-8157-5857-0 (pbk. : alk. paper) ISBN-10: 0-8157-5857-X (pbk. : alk. paper) 1. Poverty—Developing countries—Congresses. 2. Poverty—Government policy— Developing countries—Congresses. 3. Poor—Developing countries—Finance, Personal—Congresses. 4. Developing countries—Social policy—Congresses. 5. Microfinance—Developing countries—Congresses. I. Moser, Caroline O. N. II. Title. HC59.72.P6R427 2007 339.4'6091724—dc22 2007007720 987654321 The paper used in this publication meets minimum requirements of the American National Standard for Information Sciences—Permanence of Paper for Printed Library Materials: ANSI Z39.48-1992. Typeset in Adobe Garamond Composition by Peter Lindeman Arlington, Virginia Printed by R. R. Donnelley Harrisonburg, Virginia 5857-0 ch00 frontmatter 3/9/07 4:02 PM Page v Contents Foreword vii Lael Brainard and Pablo Farias Acknowledgments ix 1 Introduction 1 Caroline Moser Part One: Lessons from Research 2 Intergenerational Asset Accumulation and Poverty Reduction in 15 Guayaquil, Ecuador, 1978–2004 Caroline Moser and Andrew Felton 3 Learning from Asset-Based Approaches to Poverty 51 Michael R. Carter 4 The Stages-of-Progress Methodology and Results from Five Countries 62 Anirudh Krishna Part Two: Asset Policy—Social Protection or Asset Accumulation Policy? 5 Asset Accumulation Policy and Poverty Reduction 83 Caroline Moser 6 Addressing Vulnerability through Asset Building 104 and Social Protection Sarah Cook v 5857-0 ch00 frontmatter 3/9/07 4:02 PM Page vi vi Contents 7 Social Protection and Asset Accumulation by the Middle Class 122 and the Poor in Latin America Andrés Solimano Part Three: Asset Accumulation and Consolidation in Practice 8 Building Natural Resource–Based Assets in Southern Africa: 137 Workable Scenarios Paula Nimpuno-Parente 9 Protecting Land Rights in Post-Tsunami and Postconflict 149 Aceh, Indonesia Lilianne Fan 10 Hurricane Katrina: Impact on Assets and Asset-Building 167 Approaches to Poverty Reduction Amy Liu 11 Gangs, Violence, and Asset Building 179 Dennis Rodgers 12 Beyond Microfinance 196 Vijay Mahajan 13 Using Microinsurance and Financial Education to 208 Protect and Accumulate Assets Monique Cohen and Pamela Young 14 Migrant Foreign Savings and Asset Accumulation 225 Manuel Orozco 15 Transnational Communities of the United States and 239 Latin America Héctor Cordero-Guzmán and Victoria Quiroz-Becerra 16 Gender and Transnational Asset Accumulation in El Salvador 255 Sarah Gammage 17 Claiming Rights: Citizenship and the Politics of Asset Distribution 273 Clare Ferguson, Caroline Moser, and Andy Norton Contributors 289 Index 291 5857-0 ch00 frontmatter 3/9/07 4:02 PM Page vii Foreword A sset-based approaches in development focus on how the poor use their resource base to develop strategies for acquiring, mobilizing, expanding, and preserving their assets. The asset accumulation approach addresses important shortcomings in income- or consumption-focused poverty reduction strategies by emphasizing the way the poor themselves establish a base of resources under their control. Over time they can mobilize this base to generate income, produce addi- tional resources, and transfer resources across generations to broaden opportuni- ties for their children. Ownership and effective mobilization of assets help estab- lish personal and family security and encourage risk taking and diversification of productive and social activities. By focusing on the resources and capacities of those living in poverty, asset-based approaches address inequality in resource endowments and access to opportunity, providing a concrete way to measure empowerment and ultimately sustainable reduction of poverty. This volume surveys emerging research projects, policies, and programs from around the world on the topic of asset-based approaches to poverty reduction, and explores efforts and impacts. The volume grew out of a workshop held at the Brookings Institution in the summer of 2006, led by Visiting Fellow Caro- line Moser, and includes papers from the key contributors to the field. In preparation for the workshop at Brookings, Moser developed an updated conceptual review of asset-based approaches that led to participant reflections on the role of assets in a broad set of development strategies and socioeconomic settings. The result is this volume, which goes beyond traditional analysis to explore an expanded agenda for the asset accumulation field, including identify- vii 5857-0 ch00 frontmatter 3/9/07 4:02 PM Page viii viii Foreword ing areas of collaboration with rights-based approaches; linkages with work in settings of entrenched poverty, such as postdisaster and fragile state contexts; and the relation of asset accumulation to key development processes of market expansion and migration. The Ford Foundation cohosted the conference with Brookings, bringing its expertise from more than a decade of work with poverty reduction programs in the United States and internationally that focuses on asset building and commu- nity development. For example, in the United States, the Ford Foundation has shown how building lifelong savings and expanding access to home ownership can reduce poverty. Similarly, work in diverse countries such as India, Indonesia, China, South Africa, Kenya, Mexico, and Guatemala demonstrates how imple- menting new systems of community forest management can expand the asset base of natural resource–dependent communities and generate sustainable livelihoods. Furthermore, Ford’s support of microfinance models in these types of settings and others underscores the importance of access to financial services as another key component of successful asset accumulation and poverty reduction strategies. In sum, these efforts demonstrate the critical role social and economic asset building plays in advancing equity and sustainability as part of poverty reduction. At Brookings the Global Economy and Development Program explores the asset-based approach to poverty reduction as part of a spectrum of globalization issues. From international trade to global pandemics and environmental chal- lenges, this program examines how the new inputs, outputs, and pressure points of globalization can affect the world’s poor and how policymakers should respond based on independent research results, like those detailed in this volume. Overall, this volume fuses these perspectives and represents an opportunity to stimulate dialogue on poverty reduction and to highlight the importance of a dynamic focus on the participation, resource mobilization, and access to oppor- tunity of those living in poverty. Lael Brainard Vice President and Director Global Economy and Development Program Brookings Institution Pablo Farias Vice President Asset Building and Community Development Program Ford Foundation 5857-0 ch00 frontmatter 3/9/07 4:02 PM Page ix Acknowledgments T his book, and the associated research and workshop on which it is based, was undertaken with support from a grant from the Asset Building and Community Development Program of the Ford Foundation. I would like to gratefully acknowledge vice president Pablo Farias for his sustained commit- ment to and support of the development of this work on asset-based approaches to poverty reduction. Lael Brainard, Brookings vice president and director of the Global Economy and Development program, gave me the opportunity to undertake this work as a visiting fellow. At the Ford Foundation, Carl Anthony, Frank de Giovanni, Miguel Garcia, and Suzanne Siskell provided invaluable assistance in identifying workshop participants. In addition, I would like to thank Monique Cohen, Michael Carter, Anis Dani, Andrew Felton, Clare Ferguson, Estanislao Gacitua- Mario, Andrew Norton, Alison Scott, Michael Sherraden, and Peter Sollis for their generous support at different stages of this endeavor. Kathryn Lankester kindly offered essential assistance in organizing the work- shop and a complementary one undertaken in Quito, Ecuador. The editorial work of Yvonne Byron Smith, Diane Hammond, and Starr Belsky is gratefully recognized. In the Brookings Institution Press, Janet Walker has been invaluable in negotiating this book through the production process. The dedicated edito- rial and management assistance of James Pickett throughout the entire process made the completion of this book possible. ix
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