HIV/AIDS, Household Income, and Consumption Dynamics in Malawi

A survey of recent writings on the interactions between the AIDS epidemic and livelihoods in Africa leaves one with the impression that development practitioners, academics, and even casual observers of developments in Africa are hell-bent on pinning most of Africa’s economic stagnation on the AIDS...

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Main Author: Masanjala, Winford H.
Format: Book Chapter
Language:Inglés
Published: International Food Policy Research Institute 2006
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/160539
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author Masanjala, Winford H.
author_browse Masanjala, Winford H.
author_facet Masanjala, Winford H.
author_sort Masanjala, Winford H.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description A survey of recent writings on the interactions between the AIDS epidemic and livelihoods in Africa leaves one with the impression that development practitioners, academics, and even casual observers of developments in Africa are hell-bent on pinning most of Africa’s economic stagnation on the AIDS epidemic. This is all the more troubling because, although in the past 15 years economists have attempted to systematically link AIDS and poverty and to test the strength of those linkages, the relationships among livelihoods, poverty, and the AIDS epidemic remains so complex that we still know little about the actual contribution of AIDS in explaining observed cases of persistent poverty and divergent economic fortunes in Africa. For instance, a number of macro-level forecasts, from the pioneering studies (Ainsworth and Over 1992; Cuddington 1993; Cuddington and Hancock 1994) to more recent ones (e.g., Bloom and Mahal 1997; Greener, Jefferis, and Siphambe 2000; Arndt and Lewis 2001; Haacker 2002; Crafts and Haacker 2003) have generated an almost universal consensus that the AIDS epidemic will have an immense impact on the macroeconomies of hard-hit countries, significantly slowing economic growth and worsening poverty and income distribution (also see summaries in UNFPA 2002; UNAIDS 2002). Yet recent experience seems to suggest that because the HIV population is still a relatively small proportion of the total population, even in hard-hit countries, macro-level economic impacts of AIDS are likely to be barely visible in national statistics (Desbarats 2002).
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spelling CGSpace1605392025-11-06T04:14:32Z HIV/AIDS, Household Income, and Consumption Dynamics in Malawi Masanjala, Winford H. social protection HIV human immunodeficiency virus aids economic aspects nutrition nutrition policies food security households hunger impact agricultural sector income labour market social aspects A survey of recent writings on the interactions between the AIDS epidemic and livelihoods in Africa leaves one with the impression that development practitioners, academics, and even casual observers of developments in Africa are hell-bent on pinning most of Africa’s economic stagnation on the AIDS epidemic. This is all the more troubling because, although in the past 15 years economists have attempted to systematically link AIDS and poverty and to test the strength of those linkages, the relationships among livelihoods, poverty, and the AIDS epidemic remains so complex that we still know little about the actual contribution of AIDS in explaining observed cases of persistent poverty and divergent economic fortunes in Africa. For instance, a number of macro-level forecasts, from the pioneering studies (Ainsworth and Over 1992; Cuddington 1993; Cuddington and Hancock 1994) to more recent ones (e.g., Bloom and Mahal 1997; Greener, Jefferis, and Siphambe 2000; Arndt and Lewis 2001; Haacker 2002; Crafts and Haacker 2003) have generated an almost universal consensus that the AIDS epidemic will have an immense impact on the macroeconomies of hard-hit countries, significantly slowing economic growth and worsening poverty and income distribution (also see summaries in UNFPA 2002; UNAIDS 2002). Yet recent experience seems to suggest that because the HIV population is still a relatively small proportion of the total population, even in hard-hit countries, macro-level economic impacts of AIDS are likely to be barely visible in national statistics (Desbarats 2002). 2006 2024-11-21T09:51:04Z 2024-11-21T09:51:04Z Book Chapter https://hdl.handle.net/10568/160539 en Open Access application/pdf International Food Policy Research Institute Masanjala, Winford H. 2006. HIV/AIDS, Household Income, and Consumption Dynamics in Malawi. In AIDS, poverty, and hunger. Gilespie, Stuart (Ed.). Chapter 3. Pp. 57-74. Washington, DC: International Food Policy Research Institute (IFPRI). https://doi.org/10.2499/0896297586ch3.
spellingShingle social protection
HIV
human immunodeficiency virus
aids
economic aspects
nutrition
nutrition policies
food security
households
hunger
impact
agricultural sector
income
labour market
social aspects
Masanjala, Winford H.
HIV/AIDS, Household Income, and Consumption Dynamics in Malawi
title HIV/AIDS, Household Income, and Consumption Dynamics in Malawi
title_full HIV/AIDS, Household Income, and Consumption Dynamics in Malawi
title_fullStr HIV/AIDS, Household Income, and Consumption Dynamics in Malawi
title_full_unstemmed HIV/AIDS, Household Income, and Consumption Dynamics in Malawi
title_short HIV/AIDS, Household Income, and Consumption Dynamics in Malawi
title_sort hiv aids household income and consumption dynamics in malawi
topic social protection
HIV
human immunodeficiency virus
aids
economic aspects
nutrition
nutrition policies
food security
households
hunger
impact
agricultural sector
income
labour market
social aspects
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/160539
work_keys_str_mv AT masanjalawinfordh hivaidshouseholdincomeandconsumptiondynamicsinmalawi