The Political Economy of Slum Growth: Evidence from Brazil

Working papers in socioeconomic research

The Political Economy of Slum Growth: Evidence from Brazil

Publication date: 2023-01-01

Authors: Alves, Guillermo

One-fourth of the world’s urban population lives in slums and the number of slum residents grew from 650 million in 1990 to 1 billion in 2018. Existing explanations for slum growth focus on rural-urban migration and poverty. While these factors are relevant for rapidly urbanizing low-income countries, slum growth is frequent in highly urbanized, middle-income countries in Latin America. This paper provides evidence from Brazil that local government actions can increase slum growth without changes in poverty or immigration. Using a regression discontinuity design in close elections, I find that victories by a center-left, pro-poor party in the 2000 municipal election strongly increased the share of households living in slums in 2010 compared to 2000. I explore the mechanisms behind this result with a novel panel of census tracts and data on municipalities’ policies, expenditures, and sociodemographics. A more permissive attitude towards the formation of new slums is the main candidate to explain the observed effect.

Available languages

Currently we only have the publication in one language.

Technical sheet

Language: en

Country / Region: Latin America, Brasil

Format: pdf

Cite publication

Alves, Guillermo. (2023). The Political Economy of Slum Growth: Evidence from Brazil. Caracas: CAF

Authors

Alves, Guillermo

No. of publications 30

Recommended reading