4.5 Article

Poverty alleviation and rural revitalization: Perspective of fiscal spending and data evidence from 81 Chinese counties

Journal

HELIYON
Volume 9, Issue 7, Pages -

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.heliyon.2023.e17451

Keywords

Poverty -specific allocations; Public spending; Poverty reduction effects; Panel Tobit

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This paper constructs a theoretical model of government performance functions for poverty alleviation and verifies the effect of fiscal policies on poverty reduction using county-level panel data from 81 counties in China. The results show that poverty-related allocations and public spending can significantly reduce poverty incidence, with more pronounced effects in poor counties. The study also suggests increasing the size of povertyspecific allocations and public spending, strengthening industry support, and implementing differentiated policy initiatives to improve the impact of poverty reduction.
This paper builds a theoretical model of government performance functions for poverty alleviation using county-level panel data from 81 counties in China from 2014 to 2019. It uses a PanelTobit model and mechanism tests to verify the effect of fiscal policies on poverty reduction, and consolidates the robustness of the results through a series of extended methods, such as endogeneity treatment, robustness tests, and heterogeneity analysis. The results show that (1) povertyrelated allocations can significantly reduce poverty incidence, and the effect of poverty reduction is more pronounced in poor counties; (2) public spending can significantly reduce poverty incidence, and the effect of poverty reduction through public spending is more pronounced in the sample of poor counties and nonfunded pilot counties; (3) poverty reduction can affect poverty incidence through primary and secondary industry development, and the effect of poverty reduction through primary industry development is more significant, while public spending does not affect poverty incidence through primary and secondary industries; and (4) improving health services can reduce poverty to a large extent, while education development has no effect on poverty reduction due to the long return cycle. This study suggests increasing the size of povertyspecific allocations and public spending, strengthening industry support, and implementing differentiated policy initiatives according to local conditions to improve the impact of poverty reduction.

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