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Abstract
Poverty mapping applies models of household welfare developed from detailed
household consumption and expenditure surveys to the extensive but less detailed data
from national censuses. A poverty map for Malawi, developed by drawing upon
information from the 1997–98 Malawi Integrated Household Survey with the 1998
Malawi Population and Housing Census, provides aggregate estimates of household
welfare and poverty at a highly disaggregated level—down to the level of local
government wards. Given the close association between welfare and food security in
most Malawi households, such a detailed poverty map can be of considerable value to
development and relief organizations, as they plan and target activities to improve the
ability of poor households to cope with food scarcity.
This paper assesses the value of the Malawi poverty map with reference to two
activities of the World Food Programme (WFP) in Malawi: the Food for Assets and
Development (FFASD) public works program and the Vulnerability Analysis and
Mapping (VAM) food insecurity information generation system. First, the poverty
targeting efficiency of the FFASD program is evaluated using the poverty map to
determine whether the FFASD projects are preferentially located in areas where
disproportionate numbers of the poor are found. This is done in part by comparing the
poverty targeting efficiency of the WFP program to that of the Malawi Social Action
Fund Public Works Programme projects. Second, WFP employs the VAM methodology
to determine how and where to employ its resources from year to year. The potential
value of the poverty map as a component of the VAM process in Malawi is then
considered.
The results indicate that the poverty map is an effective and objective way to
geographically target projects and programs on a poverty basis in Malawi. In assessing
household vulnerability to food insecurity, the poverty map serves as a useful proxy
indicator of spatial variability in the ability of the population to cope with food scarcity.
Poverty maps, in those countries were they are available, should be a privileged data source for undertaking any national vulnerability analyses. However, the poverty map
needs to be used with complementary data to better understand the risks households face
that might result in food scarcity and the actual mechanisms households use to cope with
such stresses.