Modelling Welfare Transitions to Prioritise Sustainable Development Interventions in Coastal Kenya

Jacob Katuva, Rob Hope, Tim Foster, Johanna Koehler, Patrick Thomson

Research output: Contribution to JournalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

Welfare transitions are weakly understood in sub-Saharan Africa due to limited panel data to analyze trajectories of household escaping from, falling into, or remaining out of deprivation. We model data from 3500 households in coastal Kenya in three panels from 2014 to 2016 to evaluate determinants of welfare by multidimensional and subjective measures. Findings indicate that more than half of the households are deprived, with female-headed households being the most vulnerable and making the least progress. The subjective welfare measure identified three times more chronically poor households than the multidimensional metric (27% vs. 9%); in contrast, the multidimensional metric estimated twice as many 'never poor' households than the subjective measure (39% vs. 16%). The 'churning poor' were broadly consistent for both measures at roughly half the sample. Four welfare priorities converged from modelling welfare transitions. Broadening access to secondary education and energy services, improving the reliability and proximity of drinking water services, and ending open defecation improve welfare outcomes. While the policy implications do not align neatly with Kenya's national and county government mandates, we argue that prioritising fewer but targeted sustainable development goals may improve accountability, feasibility, and responsibility in delivery if informed by local priorities and political salience.

Original languageEnglish
Article number6943
Pages (from-to)1-22
Number of pages22
JournalSustainability
Volume12
Issue number17
Early online date26 Aug 2020
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Sept 2020

Funding

Funding: This research was supported by Base Titanium, NERC, ESRC and DFID via the Gro for GooD project (UPGro Consortium Grant: NE/M008894/1), ESRC-DFID Joint Fund for Poverty Alleviation Research: New Mobile Citizens and Waterpoint Sustainability in Rural Africa - ES/J018120/1. Ethical permission to conduct this survey was provided by the University of Oxford’s Central University Research Ethics Committee and research permission granted by the Government of Kenya’s National Council of Science and Technology, Kenya (NCST/RCD/17/013/132, September 2013). All interviews were voluntary with informed consent procedures observed in the local language. Data have been anonymised and stored in encrypted files.

FundersFunder number
ESRC-DFID
Government of Kenya’s National Council of Science and Technology, KenyaNCST/RCD/17/013/132
New Mobile Citizens and Waterpoint Sustainability in Rural AfricaES/J018120/1
Economic and Social Research Council
National Eye Research Centre
Department for International DevelopmentNE/M008894/1

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