By Alawi Masare, The Citizen Reporter
In Summary
Based on the 2012 Household Budget Survey, the World
Bank’s Tanzania Mainland Poverty Assessment released yesterday shows
that poverty has declined by approximately one per cent each year
between 2007 and 2012.
Dar es Salaam. Official figures show that
poverty has been decreasing in the past five years, but the World Bank
says the vast majority of Tanzanians still live in poverty.
Based on the 2012 Household Budget Survey, the
World Bank’s Tanzania Mainland Poverty Assessment released yesterday
shows that poverty has declined by approximately one per cent each year
between 2007 and 2012.
Basic needs poverty, which refers to the minimum
resources needed for physical wellbeing, declined from 34.4 per cent in
2006 to 28.2 per cent by 2012, while extreme poverty also decreased from
11.7 per cent to 9.7 per cent, with developments attributed to
sustained economic growth during the period. The report also indicates
that there were signs of pro-poor growth during the period although
approximately 70 per cent of Tanzanians continued to earn less than $2 a
day.
However, these improvements were experienced
mainly by less well-off households whose members continue to suffer from
different forms of deprivations, according to Ms Nadia Belhaj Hassine
Belghith, World Bank senior economist and lead author of the report who
presented the assessment summary.
“Poverty is particularly pervasive in the rural
areas where around 70 per cent of the Tanzanian population lives. This
is due to the fact that the economy is being driven by fast-growing
sectors like financial intermediation and communication which do not
create more jobs.”
She said, despite the positive changes in recent
years, the number of the poor, particularly in rural areas, is still
high and the welfare disparity between the geographic regions is
widening.
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