Abstract

We identified clusters of multiple dimensions of poverty according to the capability approach theory by applying data mining approaches to the Cuatro Santos Health and Demographic Surveillance database, Nicaragua. Four municipalities in northern Nicaragua constitute the Cuatro Santos area, with 25,893 inhabitants in 5,966 households (2014). A local process analyzing poverty-related problems, prioritizing suggested actions, was initiated in 1997 and generated a community action plan 2002–2015. Interventions were school breakfasts, environmental protection, water and sanitation, preventive healthcare, home gardening, microcredit, technical training, university education stipends, and use of the Internet. In 2004, a survey of basic health and demographic information was performed in the whole population, followed by surveillance updates in 2007, 2009, and 2014 linking households and individuals. Information included the house material (floor, walls) and services (water, sanitation, electricity) as well as demographic data (birth, deaths, migration). Data on participation in interventions, food security, household assets, and women's self-rated health were collected in 2014. A K-means algorithm was used to cluster the household data (56 variables) in six clusters. The poverty ranking of household clusters using the unsatisfied basic needs index variables changed when including variables describing basic capabilities. The households in the fairly rich cluster with assets such as motorbikes and computers were described as modern. Those in the fairly poor cluster, having different degrees of food insecurity, were labeled vulnerable. Poor and poorest clusters of households were traditional, e.g., in using horses for transport. Results displayed a society transforming from traditional to modern, where the forerunners were not the richest but educated, had more working members in household, had fewer children, and were food secure. Those lagging were the poor, traditional, and food insecure. The approach may be useful for an improved understanding of poverty and to direct local policy and interventions.

Highlights

  • The first of the Sustainable Development Goals aims at ending poverty in all its forms, everywhere

  • Of the 5,966 households included in the 2014 update of the Health and Demographic Surveillance System (HDSS), 5,253 (88%) were included in the analyses after eliminating households with missing values on any variable

  • The household level was chosen as the level of measurement as it is in demographic surveillance

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Summary

Introduction

The first of the Sustainable Development Goals aims at ending poverty in all its forms, everywhere This is further specified as reducing by 2030 at least by half the proportion of men, women, and children of all ages that currently live in poverty in all its dimensions according to national definitions (our underscore) [1]. The poverty measures used by the World Bank and many international agencies are usually monetary measures on the national level, such as the poverty line at 1.90 purchasing power parity dollar and the gross domestic product per capita. These monetary measures of poverty are possible to compare over time and across nations. Asset scores cannot be used to follow or compare development over time since each index is only valid for the survey for which it was created

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