The world’s rural poor rely heavily on their immediate natural environment for subsistence and suffer high rates of morbidity and mortality from infectious diseases. We present a general framework for modelling subsistence and health of the rural poor by coupling simple dynamic models of population ecology with those for economic growth. The models show that feed-backs between the biological and economic systems can lead to a state of persistent poverty. Analyses of a wide range of specific systems under alternative assumptions show the existence of three possible regimes corresponding to a globally stable development equilibrium, a globally stable poverty equilibrium and bistability. Bistability consistently emerges as a property of generalized disease–economic systems for about a fifth of the feasible parameter space. The overall proportion of parameters leading to poverty is larger than that resulting in healthy/wealthy development. All the systems are found to be most sensitive to human disease parameters. The framework highlights feedbacks, processes, and parameters that are important to measure in studies of rural poverty to identify effective pathways towards sustainable development.
General ecological models for human subsistence, health and poverty
Abstract
Publication Type
Journal Article
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Journal
Nature Ecology and Evolution
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Andrew Dobson
Nita Bharti
Matt Bonds
Article published in Ecology Letters
Article published in Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London B: Biological Sciences