Djibouti Urban Monitoring System

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Author(s)
FEG Consulting
Publication language
English
Pages
1pp
Date published
01 Oct 2004
Publisher
FEG Consulting
Type
Factsheets and summaries
Keywords
Livelihoods, Urban
Countries
Djibouti

 

A senior consultant from FEG Consulting helped FEWS NET set up an urban livelihoods
monitoring system in Djibouti City in 2003 following an HEA assessment. It was
designed to monitor changes in this important Red Sea port and international military
base. Here, an important determinant of income in poor households is the availability of
casual labour, which is largely dependent on activity in the port and within the
construction sector.
Government policy can also have a significant impact on livelihoods – not just through its
influence on incomes (through changes in salaries and pensions) and on expenditure
(through pricing policy), but through its policy on migration. In 2003, the expulsion of
foreign migrants reduced both the competition for low-paid work and the demand for
basic goods and services. All these factors were incorporated into the HEA-based
monitoring system.
One of the key results of the work was that it helped convince the government to
eliminate the tax on kerosene, which was limiting the amount of cash income
households had to spend on education and health.