POVERTY
IN SYRIA 1996 - 2004
This report is the first output from an ongoing process of collaboration
between the Government of Syria, UNDP, and other national and international
stakeholders to devise a poverty reduction strategy for
And The main investigators of this report were Heba El-Laithy (Principal
Investigator) and Khalid Abu-Ismail (UNDP Regional Adviser on Macroeconomics
and Poverty, Sub-Regional Resource Facility for Arab States).
The
findings of this study are based primarily on data from two surveys: the
Household Income and Expenditure Survey (HIES) conducted by the Central Bureau
of Statistics (CBS) in 1996-1997 and 2003-2004. In addition, national accounts
data, as well as other secondary data available from government sources, were
used.
The report’s principal finding is that, in 2003-2004, almost 2 million
individuals in Syria (11.4 per cent of the population) could not obtain their
basic food and non-food needs. Using higher expenditure poverty
line, overall poverty in Syria rises to 30.1 per cent, representing almost 5.3
million individuals In addition, the
report identifies seven other major trends and characteristics related to
changes in the scope and distribution of poverty in
More information about the study >>