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2000/2001 Household Budget Survey (HBS). Conducted by The National Bureau of Statistics. Sample Design. 22,178 Households were covered in 2000/01 Around 1,000 Households in each region The Survey provides Regional Estimates 4,823 Households were covered in 1991/92
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2000/2001 Household Budget Survey (HBS) Conducted by The National Bureau of Statistics
Sample Design • 22,178 Households were covered in 2000/01 • Around 1,000 Households in each region • The Survey provides Regional Estimates • 4,823 Households were covered in 1991/92 • It provides National Estimates • Both surveys provide rural/urban/DSM
Information Collected • Household Members’ Education, Economic Activities and Health Status • Household Expenditure, Consumption and Income • Ownership of Consumer Goods and Assets • Housing Structure and Building Materials, and • Household Access to Services and Facilities
Analysis: General Issues • In framework of poverty monitoring & policy: Tanzania development Vision 2025, National Poverty Eradication Strategy and the PRSP, • Analysis guided by the Research and Analysis TWG and stakeholder consultations • Provides a baseline for the future • Describes trends in 1990s, comparing with HBS 1991/92
RESULTS The Tanzanian Household
Percentage of Households Living in Dwellings Made of Modern Materials
Household Amenities • Fall in Average Distance to Some Key Services (Markets, Public Transport, Shops) • Increase in Ownership of a Number of Consumer Goods • 10% of Hhs are Connected to Electricity National Grid • This Increased in Urban Areas Only
Percentage of Adults with Some Education, by Sex and Area, 2000/01
Percentage of Children Aged 7-13 in School, 1991/92 and 2000/01
There are Many Over Aged Children in Primary School • They are Often Below the Class they Should be in for Their Age • Enrolment in Secondary Education is Low, 5% of 14 – 17 year olds are in Forms 1-IV
Client (User) Satisfaction • Clients reported most dissatisfaction with Govt. Providers • Long waiting times • Lack of Drugs • High Cost of Modern private care • Ineffectiveness of Treatment for Traditional Healers
About 89% of Rural Hhs owned Land for Agriculture or Grazing, As was in 1991/92 • The Degree of Agriculture Mechanisation among Rural Hhs is Low – 11% Own a Plough, only 0.2% have a Tractor
Expenditure Recorded over One Month • The survey recorded everything that the interviewed households consumed over one month • It included food and other items that have been purchased, and food grown by the Hh and consumed during the month • It excluded household expenditure that was not for consumption, e.g., purchasing inputs for a farm worked by the household
Trends in Household Consumption Expenditure per Person • Average Consumption is highest in Dar es Salaam and lowest in Rural Areas (TShs. 21,949 compared to 8,538) • After adjusting for inflation, Hh consumption rose by around 17% • The largest rise was in DSM
Overview of Poverty Analysis Data Non- Cons. Total Exp. House- hold Not Poor Cons. Cons. AE Poverty Line Poor AE = Adult Equivalent
Percentage of the Population below the Basic Needs Poverty Line, 1991/92 and 2000/01
Because of population growth, there was an increase in the number of individuals living in poverty (11.4 mill in 2000/01 compared to 9.5 mill in 1991/92) • A small increase in inequality occurred
Percentage of Poor Individuals, by Education of Household Head, 1991/92 and 2000/01
A Diversity of Sources • The sale of Agricultural products was the main source of Cash Income for 62% of Hhs, compared with 67% in 1991/92 • Food Crops remain the most important single source • The importance of cash crops has fallen. They provide the main cash source for only 17% of Hhs • Agriculture provides slightly over half of total household Income, 60% in rural areas.
Mean Monthly Income per Earner by Gender and Educational Level (‘000 TShs)
Income poverty is high and many social indicators are poor • There are large differences in the indicators between different groups • The largest gap is between urban and rural populations – the rural population is much poorer
Regional differences are more variable; some are consistently disadvantaged e.g Lindi, Singida • Differences between men and women are smaller than the geographical differences • Women have lower incomes than men and less education, but girls have higher primary school enrolment
Many measures of welfare show modest improvements during the 1990s • The economy diversified and household consumption has increased • The proportion who are poor has fallen slightly, although the absolute numbers has risen. • But there have been increases in inequality – particularly between urban and rural areas