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Informal settlements & consumption gaps: decomposing the urban-rural consumption gap within African countries

Abstract:
Regional inequality, epitomised by the urban-rural consumption gap, is considerable in the developing world. I use a city-based approach to decompose the gap in ten sub-Saharan African countries, evaluating living standards by proximity to cities (in rural areas) and size of cities (in urban areas). I further decompose the consumption gap by incorporating urban informal settlements (‘slums’). Despite the prominence of slums in sub-Saharan Africa, they are under-studied as they are difficult to identify and connect with survey data. I address those challenges by (i) creating the first transcontinental map of slums; and (ii) improving upon current best practice in connecting spatial and survey data in sub-Saharan Africa. Within slums, I proxy for the formality of housing by creating a tool that measures how regularly – on orthogonal axes – buildings are laid out. To measure living standards, I implement the approach of the seminal paper measuring consumption gaps, Young (2013), via Item Reponse Theory. I use the detailed regional decomposition of living standards to reevaluate potential explanations for the urban-rural divide.
Publication status:
Published

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Publisher:
University of Oxford
Series:
CSAE Working Paper Series
Place of publication:
Oxford
Publication date:
2022-10-13
Paper number:
CSAE-WPS-2022-11


Language:
English
Keywords:
Pubs id:
1282840
Local pid:
pubs:1282840
Deposit date:
2022-10-13

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