‘Current Economic and Development Outlook of the
Eastern Federal State’
By Matthias Ngobi Miti
Butembe County
1.0
Introduction
This
paper was aimed at drawing together basic information on the economy of a potential
Eastern Federal State in
Uganda. Eastern Uganda is categorized into three sub
regions specifically East-Central, Mid-Eastern and North East. The districts in
East Central include:
Jinja, Iganga, Namutumba, Kamuli, Kaliro, Bugiri, Luka, Budiope, Namayingo and
Mayuge. Mid-Eastern has Kapchorwa,
Bukwa, Mbale, Bududa, Manafwa, Tororo, Butaleja, Sironko, Paliisa, Budaka and
Busia. The sub-region of North East
consists of Kotido, Abim, Moroto, Kaabong, Nakapiripiriti, Katwaki, Amuria,
Bukedea, Soroti, Kumi and Kaberamaido districts. In some cases, the economic
performance of the said region is compared against others as well as
nationally. The discussion is centered on nine socio-economic indicators
specifically household characteristics, education, employment, health, consumption
expenditures, poverty and inequality trends, household income, welfare and
vulnerability levels.
2.0
Household characteristics
Eastern
Region has the largest population by region in Uganda. There was
a decline in the proportion of the population in Central region from 29 to 27
percent and Western from 26 to 24 percent while in Eastern region it increased
from 25 to 30 percent when compared to 2005/06.
Furthermore, the average household size of
Eastern region remained the highest at 5.6. Central region registered a sharp
decline of 0.7 at 4.1 in 2009/10 as well as Western region from 5.5 to 5.1 by
2009/10 possibly because of increased education levels compared to Eastern
region. In terms of family stability, Eastern region had the lowest population
above 18 years who never married(15%),highest currently married polygamous(19.7%),second
highest divorced/separated) and nearly
the utmost portion of widow/widowers(8.3%) with Northern Uganda at the top with
(9.1%) attributed the civil strife and wars.
Regarding religion, the Protestant
faith had the majority of followers (38.0 %), followed by Catholics (30.4
%), Muslims (17.8%), Pentecostals (11.4%), SDA (1.2%), traditionalists (0.2.0%)
and others (1.0%).
3.0 Education
In contrast to other regions, adult males
in Eastern region maintained the lead position in having the highest illiteracy
levels in Uganda while the increment in the literacy growth rate for females
was lower than that of Northern region between the years 2005-2010. Literacy levels for adult females in Eastern
Uganda increased from 56 percent in 2005/06 to 60 percent in 2009/10 while in
Northern region, the increment was 7 percentage points at 52 percent in 2009/10. Overall, Eastern region
with 68 percent in 2009/10 follows Northern region (64%) in having the lowest
adult literacy rates by region.
In terms of Education
attainment (Persons aged 15 years and above), 18.3 percent in Eastern region
had no formal schooling while 23.1 percent complete secondary education. Eastern
region had the highest proportion of persons who complete primary (56%) but
also had the lowest proportion of persons who were educated at secondary level
and above (2.5 %) in 2009/10.
Of the 5 regions, Eastern
Uganda occupied the third position in the reading culture. Overall, 30.5 percent participated in
reading, 39. 8 percent male and 22.4 percent female. The leading region in
participation in reading books, news papers, magazines and journals was Kampala
with 70.4 percent .It was followed by Central with 44.7
percent.
4.0 Employment
Whereas Eastern region had
the highest labour force[1] by region (26%) and
the fastest labour force growth rate of 6.9 percent, it also recorded the lowest
Labour Force Participation Rate[2] (LFPR) in the two
surveys; 71.4% in 2005/09 and 76.8 percent in 2009/10.
It also leads other regions in terms of the
working population growth rate which increased by 6.4 percent at 26.6 percent
in 2009/10. Excluding Kampala, it had the lowest proportion of multiple job
holders of 26.1 percent by 2009/10.
Unemployment in Eastern region sharply rose
by 2.3 percent to 3 percent (91,000 persons) in 2009/10 which was slightly
below the national average of 4.2 percent.
Whereas in 2005/06, it was in
the third bottom ranking position, currently Eastern region tops with 4.1
percent in time related underemployment. It is 0.6 percentage points above the
national average of 3.5 percent in 2009/10. This implies that more people in Eastern
region work
less than 40 hours a week in comparison to other regions. The same region had
the lowest proportion of Skill under utilization of 2.7 percent in
2009/10. In addition, the UNHS 2009/10 findings show that 10.8 percent employed
persons in Eastern region are inadequately paid.
5.0 Health
With regard to health,
Eastern region had a bigger proportion of the population that
suffered illnesses within 30 days compared to other regions. Disease
prevalence rose by 1.9 points at 50.6 percent, which is far higher than the
national coverage of 42.9 percent in 2009/10. The 2009/10 UNHS results indicate
that Eastern region had the highest incidences of Malaria (53.9
percent) despite the rise in the use of mosquito nets from 17.2 to 47.0
percent, lowest respiratory infections(12.9%),second highest cases of
diarrhea(3.7%),highest urinary and skin infections of 0.3 percent and 1.8 percent
respectively. About 76.5 percent of communities reportedly accessed Improved
Sources of Drinking Water.
6.0 Consumption
Expenditures
Consumption Expenditure per Household rose
by UGX 14,500 at UgX.193,400 but still
below the national coverage of 210,450 in 2009/10. Although
the mean per capita expenditure within Eastern region increased from UgX.31,800 in
2004/05 to 34,850 in 2009/10, the figure is far below the national average
of UgX.42,150.Besides, a real
decline is noted in the urban areas of the Eastern region.
Of all regions, the Eastern
recorded the lowest average growth rate of Mean Consumption Expenditure
per Adult Equivalent (MCEA). The average MCEA growth rate for
Eastern Rural slumped from 4.4 to 3.4 percent while Eastern Urban recorded a
sharp fall from 2.4 to -2.4 percent for the periods of 2002-2006 and 2006-2010
respectively. The people in the East of
Uganda spend 54 percent of their income on food and beverages while those in
central and Kampala spend as less as 38 and 30 percent respectively. Other expenditure
items for the east included Rent, fuel and energy with 15 percent, health with
6 percent while Transport and communication absorbs 6 percent. In contrast to other regions, Eastern had the
lowest expenditure on education of 5 percent.
7.0 Poverty and inequality trends
According to the recent UNHS,
2009/10:81-85, the proportion of people in poverty in Eastern region declined
from 35.9 percent to 24.3 percent (that is, from 2.45 million to 2.2 million
persons in poverty, respectively). The decline is driven by the rural areas,
which experienced a 12.7 percentage point drop. Considering the poverty levels
in 10 sub-regions, North East was in the lead with 75.8
percent, followed by Mid-Northern with 40.4 percent, west Nile with
39.7percent, Eastern 26.5 percent, East Central had 21.4 percent and Mid-Western
had 25.3 percent. Inequality varied from 0.319 in Eastern region to 0.451 in
Central region.
Figure 1: Number of poor persons in the Eastern region.
Data source: UHBS, 2009/10
Eastern Rural had the highest
poverty incidence of 3.09 percent which declined to 2.36 in 2005/06 and 2.07percent
in 2009/10. In the year, 2002/03,
Eastern was at the top of other regions with 3.19 millions of poor persons.
Meanwhile, Northern region had only 0.64 poor persons in excess of Eastern
Uganda in 2009/10. However, from
2005-2010, Eastern was over taken by Northern rural sub-region whose poverty
rates slightly dropped by 0.23 percentage points at 2.72 percent in 2009/10.
Findings of study by UBOS titled, “Spatial Trends of Poverty and Inequality
in Uganda: 2002-2005,” indicated that Busoga region, Mbale and Pallisa districts reportedly had the highest
concentration of poor people. The report said more than 100 poor
people live per square Km in these areas.
In these districts, the poverty density (number of poor people living
on less than a dollar a day) per square Km per sub-county is more than 100
people, compared to other regions. Poverty was attributed to poor health, lack
of access to clean water, poor sanitary disposal and high population.
Data source: UNHS 2002/03, 2005/06
(2009/10)
Why do areas sub regions not
severely affected by War compared to Northern Uganda, have almost the same
number of poor persons? If the cause is related to deliberate public neglect
and poor policy options, then the regime in power ought to account for this
discrepancy to the people in the East of the country!
Table 1 : Poverty estimates and contribution to P0, P1 and P2 in the UNHS
IV 2009/10 by sub region
Sub-region
|
Population Share
|
Mean
CPAE
|
Poverty estimates
|
Percent contribution to P0, P1 & P2
|
||||
Po
|
P1
|
P2
|
Po
|
P1
|
P2
|
|||
East
Central
|
13.1
|
53,733
|
21.4
|
4.8
|
1.7
|
11.5
|
9.4
|
8.2
|
Mid-Eastern
|
16.5
|
46,499
|
26.5
|
6.5
|
2.3
|
17.9
|
15.9
|
13.8
|
North-East
|
3.4
|
31,323
|
75.8
|
35.0
|
19.1
|
10.5
|
17.5
|
23.3
|
Uganda
|
100
|
62,545
|
24.5
|
6.8
|
2.8
|
100
|
100
|
100
|
Northern
|
20
|
38,988
|
46.2
|
15.5
|
7.3
|
38.0
|
46.0
|
52.7
|
Data source: UNHS 2009/10
The
study by Okurut et al (2002:28) concluded that based on the national poverty
line, Northern Uganda has been found to be the poorest area in the country; it
has the largest depth of poverty and the worst inequality. However, ‘Using
region-specific poverty lines, Eastern region has the worst indicators of
poverty. The same paper affirms Western region as the richest region in Uganda.
At
the national level, various studies of (UBOS), indicate a striking decline in
poverty incidences from 56 percent in 1992 to 38.0 percent in 2003, 38.8 percent
in 2005 i.e.9.8 million Ugandans, 31 percent in 2008 and 24.5 percent by 2010.
Despite this drop, the Gini- coefficient index increased from 0.395 in
1999/2000(UNHS) to 0.428 in 2002/03 (UNHS). Other studies show that poverty
levels increased from 39 to 49 percent among households engaged in Agriculture.
Yet the proportion of those employed in Agriculture grew from 39 to 50 percent
over the same period (DENIVA, 2006, SEATINI, 2005).
8.0 Household income
Available information reveals that households in the Eastern
region earn 1.8 times lower than their national counter parts.
At regional level, Eastern had the lowest growth rate (10.3 percent) of the total average monthly household
income for the period 2005/06-2009/10.
Kampala stood in the first position with 175.8 percent growth rate, followed by
Western with 90.6 percent and Central with 86.1 percent. Both Northern and
Eastern were below the national average of 77.8 percent. Simply put, the total monthly income of a resident in Kampala is about 6
times more than a resident of Eastern region which formerly hosted the most
industrialized town in East Africa!
Table 2: Total average monthly household income and growth
rate by region from 2005/06-2009/10
Region
|
2005/06
|
2009/10
|
Average Income growth rate
|
Kampala
|
347,900
|
959,400
|
175.8
|
Central
|
209,300
|
389,600
|
86.1
|
Eastern
|
155,500
|
171,500
|
10.3
|
Northern
|
93,400
|
141,400
|
51.4
|
Western
|
159,100
|
303,200
|
90.6
|
Uganda
|
170,800
|
303,700
|
77.8
|
Source: UNHS,
2009/10, Extracted from Table 7.1: Average Monthly Income by Region and
Residence (UGX); 93.
With regard to income from cultural activities, the majority 53.8
percent in Eastern region earned
from herbal medicine practice. The region also recorded the highest proportion
of interpreters (12 .2 %). In comparison to other regions, Eastern still had
the lowest proportion of adults who earned from music (17.8%) and drama (7.3%),
and making mats and baskets (9.1%). About 24 percent households
were operating Informal Businesses. Mining and quarrying (52%) and fishing
(47.9%) were predominant in the Eastern region (52%). In addition, the
industries of agriculture had 32 percent, food processing (22.4%), hotels &
restaurants (23%), trade (24.6%) and services (21.8%)
9.0 Welfare levels
Well-being of individuals or
groups takes consideration of their health, happiness, safety, prosperity, and
fortunes. Eastern was in the
lead with 90.7 percent of the households owning a house. This was above
the national coverage of 81.4 percent. In terms of the households
owning land, it was second with 81.7 percent to Western Uganda which registered
85.4
percent. It had the lowest proportion of
households owning electric equipments such as television sets, radios, and
radio cassettes (43.5percent) lower than the national coverage of 53.9
percent and also the least proportion of households owning Jewellery and
watches (13.3 percent). It had the second lowest portion of households using
mobile phones of 38.7 percent below the national average of 46.3
percent.
Furthermore, Eastern had the highest
proportion of households using bicycles 46.6 percent, which was above the national
average of 36.7 percent. Only 2.7 and 0.8 percent do own motor vehicles and
motor cycles respectively.
Table
3: Household welfare indicators
Household Welfare indicator
|
Eastern
|
National
|
||||
2002/05
|
2005/06
|
2009/10
|
2002/05
|
2005/06
|
2009/10
|
|
Possession of Two Sets of Clothes
|
83.7
|
87.5
|
91.2
|
88.0
|
87.0
|
88.2
|
Ownership of Blanket
|
23.7 0
|
30.5
|
35.0
|
39.6
|
35.3
|
43.1
|
Possessing at Least a
Pair
of Shoes
|
25.2
|
34.1
|
45.7
|
44.7
|
49.7
|
58.1
|
Took One Meal a Day
|
3.0
|
4.8
|
7.3
|
7.7
|
8.5
|
9.3
|
Data
source:
UNHS,2009/10
Eastern region had the highest proportion
of households 17.8 percent who did not
provide Breakfast for children Aged below 5 Years and also had the
lowest proportion of households (0.8percent) that provided children Porridge
with milk! Also, it followed Kampala (93.3%) in the proportion of households
owning furniture and furnishings with 86.4 percent.
In 2005/2006, Eastern was still in the
lead with 43.2 percent of the households who considered borrowing from
neighbors when they ran short of salt. However, in 2009/10, it slipped in the
second position with 47 percent and Northern had the top borrowers of salt of
62.3 percent.
Importantly, Eastern had the highest
proportion of households using paraffin candles ‘tadooba’ as lighting fuel,
81.2 percent in 2005/06 and 80.2 percent in 20091/0. It also occupied the
second bottom place in the proportion of households connected to electricity
(3.5 percent). In 2009/10, it was at the top of all regions with 83.1percent still
using the traditional ‘three stones’ cooking technology while also maintaining
the lowest position in the use of improved stoves with a slight increment of
1.7 percentage points at 4.8 percent .
About 11.4 percent of households do not use toilet facility but visit
the bush to dispose off their feaces. This is above the national coverage of
households without toilets were 8.7 percent in 2009/10. Eastern
Uganda also had the second lowest proportion of households using VIP (1.9%) and
flush toilets (0.6%).
1.0 Vulnerability:
Eastern region had the lowest proportion of
paternal orphan-hood (5.8%) and proportion of orphans (9.2%). It also recorded
the highest proportion of children aged 0-17 with surviving two parents (90.8
%). Only 1.6 percent had lost both parents. In 2005/06, it also had the second
highest proportion of households with 4 orphans and beyond but by 2009/10, this
slumped to 12 percent and it was in fourth position. In 2009/10, it had the
second least proportion of vulnerable children with 34 percent down from 66
percent in 2005/06.
References for Further Reading:
DENIVA. (February
2006). A final report on the TDP project; Uganda: The Impacts of Trade
Liberalization in the Dairy and Maize Sectors on Household Welfare.
Okurut
F.N. et al (November 2002). Determinants of regional poverty in Uganda, The African
Economic Research Consortium (AERC), Research Paper
122,
Nairobi.
SEATINI (January 2008).The
impact of liberalization of agricultural imports on the performance of the
agricultural sector and welfare of small scale farmers.
SEATINI (July 2005).The economic partnership
Agreement (EPA) negotiations: Implications and way forward.
UBOS
(2010). The Uganda National Household Survey (UNHS) 2009/10,
Socio-Economic Module, Abridged Report, November 2010.
UBOS. Uganda National Household Surveys (UNHS), 2002-2003, 2005/6.
[1] Labour
force refers to the economically active population including persons aged 14-64
years, who were either employed or unemployed during the last seven days prior
to the survey.
[2] The Labour Force
Participation Rate (LFPR) is the number of persons in the labour force
expressed as a percentage of the working-age population. It measures the extent
to which a country’s working age population (14-64 years) is economically
active. It also gives an indication of how many people of working age are
actively participating in the labour market and includes both the employed and
unemployed.
[3]
Headcount (P0) shows
how broad or wide spread the poverty is (the estimated household population
spending less than what is necessary to meet their caloric requirements and to
afford them a mark-up for non-food needs. P1 measures how poor the poor are
and, by giving more weight to the poorest, P2 gives an indication of how severe
poverty is.