Changes in adult well-being and economic inequalities: An exploratory observational longitudinal study (2002–2010) of micro-level trends among Tsimane’, a small-scale rural society of Indigenous People in the Bolivian Amazon

B-Tier
Journal: World Development
Year: 2024
Volume: 176
Issue: C

Authors (10)

Godoy, Ricardo (not in RePEc) Bauchet, Jonathan (not in RePEc) Behrman, Jere R. (University of Pennsylvania) Huanca, Tomás (not in RePEc) Leonard, William R. (not in RePEc) Reyes-García, Victoria (not in RePEc) Rosinger, Asher (not in RePEc) Tanner, Susan (not in RePEc) Undurraga, Eduardo A. (not in RePEc) Zycherman, Ariela (not in RePEc)

Score contribution per author:

0.201 = (α=2.01 / 10 authors) × 1.0x B-tier

α: calibrated so average coauthorship-adjusted count equals average raw count

Abstract

Knowing what happens over time to the lifeways of people in contemporary small-scale non-industrial societies of the rural Global South matters because it helps assess changes in the quality of life of underrepresented groups. It has been hard to answer the question because longitudinal information is rarely collected in such settings. A longitudinal dataset of nine years (2002–2010) from a horticultural-foraging society of Indigenous People in the Bolivian Amazon (Tsimane’) is used for an exploratory analysis of micro-level trends in indicators of well-being and economic inequalities. We selected 13 Tsimane’ villages (from ∼ 100) that varied in proximity to town and surveyed all households in each village. ∼ 240 households were followed yearly to estimate trends of 21 outcomes (e.g., income, sociality, macronutrients). For each economic outcome, annual and all-years-combined Gini coefficients were estimated for the entire sample across the 13 villages. We show a rise in total asset wealth, a change in asset composition (less traditional wealth, more commercial wealth), higher monetary value of foods eaten, and better-perceived health, but a decline in caloric and protein consumption and no marked gender differences in objective or hedonic measures of well-being. Economic inequalities were non-trivial and showed no marked trend but varied between years; asset inequality varied less than income inequality. We document the value of longitudinal, locally grounded indexes of well-being to obtain a granular view of micro-level changes in well-being and the possible use of inequality in the consumption of calories and macronutrients as a valid proxy for income inequality in rural areas of the Global South with tenuous links to the market economy.

Technical Details

RePEc Handle
repec:eee:wdevel:v:176:y:2024:i:c:s0305750x23003364
Journal Field
Development
Author Count
10
Added to Database
2026-01-24