Distributional Impacts of COVID-19 in the Middle East and North Africa Region

Page 117

Chapter 3: West Bank and Gaza: Links among Income, Jobs, and Food 83

and severe food insecurity increased for everyone, except for the bottom quintile in Gaza, which was already facing very high food insecurity rates. Notably, the prevalence of moderate and severe food insecurity for the bottom quintile in the West Bank is lower than food insecurity for the richest 20 percent in the Gaza in 2020.

A Complex Link: Food Insecurity, Income Loss, and Job Loss A final question considers what might be the link between changes in income and employment and changes in food insecurity. The pandemic has shown that even the better-off households were vulnerable to food insecurity after a negative shock to incomes. Using the FAO’s Food Insecurity Experience Scale, we calculate the probability of each household being food insecure in 2018 and during the 2020 lockdown, and then analyze whether changes in the household’s income and in its main income earner’s employment are correlated with changes in food insecurity. We used the probability of being food insecure in 2018 as a proxy for the probability of being food insecure before lockdown. Our results show that self-reported income loss is correlated with higher food insecurity during the lockdown—across the whole expenditure distribution. Overall, food insecurity for the West Bank and Gaza increased from 23.5 percent in the 2018 Socio-Economic and Food Security Survey to 33.8 percent in the 2020 RAPS. However, food insecurity is higher among households whose income decreased, both in the West Bank and in Gaza. Within households where income decreased during the lockdown, food insecurity prevalence increased compared with 2018 levels: 18 percentage points in the West Bank and 8 points in Gaza (figure 3.13). Although the increase is stronger in the West Bank, the baseline food insecurity in Gaza was already high, at 54 percent in 2018. Food insecurity in Gaza in 2018 was higher among households whose income decreased during the period of emergency. The increase in food insecurity during the lockdown is related to income losses across the whole expenditure distribution, even among households in the highest quintiles. Households across all expenditure levels saw their food insecurity increase in 2020 if their income decreased during the lockdown, including the richest households (figure 3.14). Almost 40 ­percent of households whose income decreased in the bottom quintile in the West Bank were food insecure during the lockdown. The increase in food insecurity is common to all households that lost income In Gaza, households whose income decreased also faced higher food insecurity during the lockdown than households that belong to the


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Introduction

4min
pages 258-259

Transmission Channels

2min
page 260

Conclusion

2min
page 276

Large Poverty Setbacks

1min
page 269

Sensitivity Analysis

2min
page 272

Key Messages

1min
page 257

References

3min
pages 254-256

Sector and More Likely to Work in Sectors Affected during the Pandemic

2min
page 244

Impacts on Household Welfare and Poverty

2min
page 243

How the Study Is Conducted

3min
pages 236-237

Suffer the Biggest Income Losses

4min
pages 238-239

How This Study Fits into the Literature on Economic Shocks

4min
pages 234-235

References

3min
pages 228-230

Future Scenarios

2min
page 221

An Innovative Methodological Approach

11min
pages 205-210

Key Messages

1min
page 197

References

0
pages 195-196

Notes

4min
pages 193-194

How the Study Is Conducted

5min
pages 185-187

Precrisis Situation: Poverty and Labor Markets

2min
page 179

Introduction

2min
page 176

Notes

3min
pages 171-174

Key Messages

1min
page 175

Conclusion

2min
page 170

5.3 Most Djiboutians Are Returning to Normal Workloads

2min
page 158

Introduction

2min
page 152

References

3min
pages 149-150

Conclusion

2min
page 145

Key Messages

0
page 151

Which Households Were Most Likely to Declare Lower Living Standards

1min
page 142

during the COVID-19 Surge

1min
page 140

Distributed in Key Transmission Channels

1min
page 134

Phone Surveys to Quickly Check on Living Standards

1min
page 131

References

1min
pages 127-128

Conclusion

4min
pages 121-122

Key Messages

0
page 129

Introduction

2min
page 130

A Complex Link: Food Insecurity, Income Loss, and Job Loss

2min
page 117

COVID-19 Impacts on Household Welfare

2min
page 112

More Than Doubled

1min
page 111

Key Messages

0
page 101

Impacts on Employment: Work Stoppages

2min
page 85

Reference

0
pages 99-100

2.1 Limitations of Phone Surveys

2min
page 83

Conclusion

1min
page 98

to Paint a COVID-19 Picture

4min
pages 70-71

Key Messages

1min
page 77

Introduction

1min
page 78

Preexisting Structural Problems

2min
page 64

Introduction

4min
pages 56-57

Key Messages

1min
page 55

Future Shocks

2min
page 51

COVID-19-Induced Shocks

2min
page 58

Notes

1min
page 52

Message 2: COVID-19 Is Just One of the Severe Socioeconomic Challenges Facing the Region

2min
page 45

References

1min
pages 53-54

Variations in Size and Timing of Containment Measures

1min
page 60
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