This report aims to assess what poverty means to marginalized rural families, what kind of survival strategies families use in times of hardship, and what these families believe is needed to alleviate their poverty. The rural families express very practical solutions to overcoming poverty, largely linked to increasing the productivity of human resources and land through training and small-scale infrastructure investments.
A complement to recent in-depth quantitative analyses of rural poverty in Ecuador, this is a report on the results of the Rural Qualitative Assessment of living conditions in rural communities in all three of Ecuador's diverse regions.
Using a variety of qualitative techniques, the research aimed to assess what poverty means to marginalized rural families, what kind of survival strategies families use in times of hardship, and what these families believe is needed to alleviate poverty. Several key messages emerge:
This paper --- a product of the Country Operations Division 1, Latin America and the Caribbean, Country Department III --- is part of a larger effort in the department to combine qualitative and quantitative analysis into economic and sector work. Copies of the paper are available free from the World Bank, 1818 H Street NW, Washington, DC 20433. Please contact Elena Rodriguez, room I5-059, telephone 202-473-7873, fax 202-334-0113, Internet address erodriguez@worldbank.org. (37 pages)</P>
The full report is available on our FTP server.