Microenterprise and Poverty. Evidence from Latin America

By Marķa Beatriz Orlando, Molly Pollack (02/00, En)

Documents MIC&POVERTY (PDF, 146 Kb, En)

This working paper is being published with the sole objective of contributing to the debate on a topic of importance to the region, and to elicit comments and suggestions from interested parties. This paper has not gone through the Department's peer review process or undergone consideration by the SDS Management Team. As such, it does not reflect the official position of the Inter-American Development Bank.

There are many unanswered questions regarding poverty in the microenterprise sector: Are microentrepreneurs and their workers poor? Who are the poor within the sector? Are households with a high dependency upon microenterprise-generated income poorer than other households? This study assesses poverty in the microenterprise sector in Latin America. We examine these questions analyzing both household income per capita and individual earnings. Previous studies report that the sector is very heterogeneous and that there are radical differences in earnings: between owners and employees, by gender, and according to economic activity. The study is based on tabulations from household surveys prepared by the Inter-American Development Bank (IDB) for fourteen countries during 1998. We also use tabulations prepared by the Economic Commission for Latin America (ECLA) in 1997 which expand on some variables of interest. The analysis resulted in the following stylized facts:



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Last updated: 06/13/07