Female-headed households and the ultra poor in Bangladesh

This report focuses on the magnitude of FHHs among the poorest and examines their socio-economic profile to highlight the distinction between FHHs and the entire sample. Female-headed households (FHHs) are of two types: households without any male adult where female is solely responsible for the...

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Autor principal: Halder, Shantana R.
Formato: Research report
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Research and Evaluation Division, Brac 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:http://hdl.handle.net/10361/12556
id 10361-12556
record_format dspace
spelling 10361-125562019-11-18T09:44:33Z Female-headed households and the ultra poor in Bangladesh Halder, Shantana R. Female Ultra poor Female-headed households NGO Household surveys--Bangladesh—Statistics. Poverty--Bangladesh. Women--Employment-- Bangladesh. This report focuses on the magnitude of FHHs among the poorest and examines their socio-economic profile to highlight the distinction between FHHs and the entire sample. Female-headed households (FHHs) are of two types: households without any male adult where female is solely responsible for the well-being of the household and households where a female is the decision maker and receives monetary support from other male members who have migrated out for employment. The first one is defined as de facto and secone one as de jure households. The prevalence of FHHs among the ultra poor is calculated at 35%, of them 78% were de facto households. The de facto households were smaller in size, nearly SO% of them were comprised of one member households, 98% were single parent households, three-fourth of them were educationally dark, one-forth of them did not possess any living houses. One-third of the de facto household heads were either beggars or disabled. The de facto households were economically less well off. Major sources of their income were charity and wage employment. A lower percentage of the de facto households owned any kind of nonland assets, the value of which was also significantly lower than others. On the other hand, the de jure households were relatively more well-off compared to de facto households and on some indicator better-off than others. 2019-09-12T09:31:33Z 2019-09-12T09:31:33Z 2000-12 Research report Halder, S. R. (2000). Female-headed households and the ultra poor in Bangladesh. Research Reports (2000), Economic Studies, (XVI), 169–188. http://hdl.handle.net/10361/12556 en application/pdf Research and Evaluation Division, Brac
institution Brac University
collection Institutional Repository
language English
topic Female
Ultra poor
Female-headed households
NGO
Household surveys--Bangladesh—Statistics.
Poverty--Bangladesh.
Women--Employment-- Bangladesh.
spellingShingle Female
Ultra poor
Female-headed households
NGO
Household surveys--Bangladesh—Statistics.
Poverty--Bangladesh.
Women--Employment-- Bangladesh.
Halder, Shantana R.
Female-headed households and the ultra poor in Bangladesh
description This report focuses on the magnitude of FHHs among the poorest and examines their socio-economic profile to highlight the distinction between FHHs and the entire sample. Female-headed households (FHHs) are of two types: households without any male adult where female is solely responsible for the well-being of the household and households where a female is the decision maker and receives monetary support from other male members who have migrated out for employment. The first one is defined as de facto and secone one as de jure households. The prevalence of FHHs among the ultra poor is calculated at 35%, of them 78% were de facto households. The de facto households were smaller in size, nearly SO% of them were comprised of one member households, 98% were single parent households, three-fourth of them were educationally dark, one-forth of them did not possess any living houses. One-third of the de facto household heads were either beggars or disabled. The de facto households were economically less well off. Major sources of their income were charity and wage employment. A lower percentage of the de facto households owned any kind of nonland assets, the value of which was also significantly lower than others. On the other hand, the de jure households were relatively more well-off compared to de facto households and on some indicator better-off than others.
format Research report
author Halder, Shantana R.
author_facet Halder, Shantana R.
author_sort Halder, Shantana R.
title Female-headed households and the ultra poor in Bangladesh
title_short Female-headed households and the ultra poor in Bangladesh
title_full Female-headed households and the ultra poor in Bangladesh
title_fullStr Female-headed households and the ultra poor in Bangladesh
title_full_unstemmed Female-headed households and the ultra poor in Bangladesh
title_sort female-headed households and the ultra poor in bangladesh
publisher Research and Evaluation Division, Brac
publishDate 2019
url http://hdl.handle.net/10361/12556
work_keys_str_mv AT haldershantanar femaleheadedhouseholdsandtheultrapoorinbangladesh
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