Does Urbanization Affect Rural Poverty? Evidence from Indian Districts

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Oxford University Press on behalf of the World Bank

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Although a high rate of urbanization and a high incidence of rural poverty are two distinct features of many developing countries, there is little knowledge of the effects of the former on the latter. Using a large sample of Indian districts from the 1983–1999 period, we find that urbanization has a substantial and systematic poverty-reducing effect in the surrounding rural areas. The results obtained through an instrumental variable estimation suggest that this effect is causal in nature and is largely attributable to the positive spillovers of urbanization on the rural economy rather than to the movement of the rural poor to urban areas. This rural poverty-reducing effect of urbanization is primarily explained by increased demand for local agricultural products and, to a lesser extent, by urban-rural remittances, the rural land/ population ratio, and rural nonfarm employment.

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agricultural products, chronic poverty, economic growth, global poverty, incidence of poverty, income, land prices, poverty levels, poverty line, poverty rates, poverty reduction, rural, rural areas, rural economy, rural households, rural linkages, rural poor, rural population, rural poverty

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