To identify and measure the incidence and intensity of the main non-‐monetary deprivations affect living conditions of the panamanians, and use it as a public policy tool to redirect actions in order to effectively reducee poverty in all its dimensions.
INSTITUTIONALITY
SOCIAL CABINET
TECHNICAL SECRETARY
MULTISECTOR COMMISSION
MPI TECHNICAL ADVISORY COMMITTEE
MINISTRY OF SOCIAL DEVELOPMENT
INSTITUTE OF NATIONAL STATISTICS
MINISTRY OF ECONOMY & FINANCE Social and Economic Analisys Direction
EXPERTS TABLE OPHI | UNDP | WB
Education Housing, Basic services and Internet Access
Environment, Surroundings and Sanitation
Job Health
School attendance
School repetition
Insufficient academic achievement
No Internet access
Lack of electricity
Precarious housing materials
Overcrowding Access or state of communication paths.
Damages to the house due to natural phenomena
Workers with inadequate remuneration
Job precariousness
Unoccupied and family worker without pay
Inadequate waste management
Lack of improved sanitation facilities
Lack of drinking water sources
Pregnancy control
Access to health services
Panama’s PMI has 5 dimensions and 17 indicators. With the MPI we can determine which deprivations affect people the most.
Education Housing, Basic services and Internet Access
Environment, Surroundings and Sanitation
Job Health
School attendance
School repetition
Insufficient academic achievement
No Internet access
Lack of electricity
Precarious housing materials
Overcrowding Access or state of communication paths.
Damages to the house due to natural phenomena
Workers with inadequate remuneration
Job precariousness
Unoccupied and family worker without pay
Inadequate waste management
Lack of improved sanitation facilities
Lack of drinking water sources
Pregnancy control
Access to health services
When a household is deprived in at 5, 6 or more of the weighted indicators, it is considered multidimensionally poor.
INTENSITY:
HOW MANY PEOPLE ARE POOR?(INCIDENCE)
43.5% On average, poor people in Panama are deprived on 8 or more indicators simultaneously, depending on the dimension.
19.1% of Panamanians live in multidimensionally poor conditions, which means that 2 out of 10 panamanians are deprived either on their education, health, housing, job, or
other dimensions of their well being.
Bocas del Toro 44.6%
Chiriquí 12.4%
Ngabe Buglé 93.4%
Veraguas 19.1%
Herrera 7.2%
Los Santos 4.2%
Coclé 22.6%
Colón 16.4
%
Panamá Oeste 15.6%
Panamá 8.5%
Emberá 70.8%
Darién 40.0%
Guna Yala 91.4%
Source: Multiple Purposes Survey, March 2017, INEC
Percentage contribution of each indicator, by province and indigenous areas
0%
25%
50%
75%
100%
Provincia Asistencia EscolarRepitenciaNo logro educaevoViviendaInternetHacinamientoElectricidadDanos por fenomenos naturalesVias de comunicacionSaneamientoBasuraDesempleoPrecariedad en el empleoDerechos laboralesAcceso a servicios de saludControl prenatal Agua para beber
Bocas d
el
Toro
Coclé
Colón
Chiriqu
í
Darié
n
Herrera
Los
Santos
Panamá
Veraguas
Comarca
Kuna Yala
Comarca
Embe
rá
Comarca
Gnabe
POLICY TOOL Quick wins | Goals alignment | Policy Analysis Platform civil society participation & proposals
PANAMA FOR ALL-‐0 POVERTY|Cabinet Decree targetting, coordiniation & integration
NATIONAL SATISTICS SYSTEM—Satistical Units MPI & SDGs
OFFICIAL POVERTY MEASURE|Cabinet Decree periodicity | source | institutionality | dimensions & indicators
PROMOTOR ÚNICO (FAMILY)
FAMILY PLAN
LOCAL SOCIAL CABINET TERRITORIAL DEVELOPMENT PLAN
Social Protection Survey
(DISTRICT)
SOCIAL CABINET PANAMA FOR ALL -‐ 0 POVERTY (NATIONAL)
INTEGRATED PACKAGE OF SOCIAL SERVICES & PROGRAMS
POOREST DISTRICTS
26TOWNS
236
EXTREME POVERTY
HOUSEHOLDS
51,115
PEOPLE IN EXTREME POVERTY
262,106
EXTREME POVERTY
HOUSEHOLDS
52%
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