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BRIEF REPORT

Identifying With The Poor? Experimental Evidence From West Africa

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Pages 308-323 | Received 20 Jul 2021, Accepted 03 Jun 2022, Published online: 15 Jun 2022
 

Abstract

Views of the poor are based on data from western countries not developing nations. How are the poor viewed in Africa? We focus on how identities shape views of the poor in Africa, and conduct a series of field experiments in Côte d’Ivoire, Ghana, and Senegal randomly selecting respondents using a multi-stage cluster sampling strategy. Our total sample includes 851 respondents that evaluated randomized profiles of a single-vignette of a person living in poverty. Results indicate that the poor are more likely to be seen as unlucky, and in some cases deserving of government assistance, if they were born into poverty, have limited education, and are female. Shared identities associated with class and ethnicity increase the chances of being viewed as unlucky and deserving of assistance.

Notes

2 Note that our data on age-group over-represents each group to some degree because we did not sample people under 18 which make up a large part of African populations.

3 Analyses in Figures 3-6 use a logit analysis with robust standard errors clustered by respondent with the point estimate and 95% confidence interval for each variable displayed.

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