While having dinner (after I took some time to walk around the hill-tribe village we were staying in) I asked my guides how much the average family income was for farmers, and for those with livestock (i.e. pigs, chickens, roosters, turkey's, etc.)
They told me a family with livestock generally earns four or five million kip (i.e. 500-620 Canadian dollars). A family the just farms earns two or three million kip. That means the poorer families in the village are running on under a dollar a day, and the better off families are mostly under two dollars a day.
This surprised me, because the people generally seemed to be in such great spirits. There was a marked difference between the people I met here and those I met in Sudan (at least those in the internally displaced persons camp I visited). I have a few ideas as to why this is (starting with the obvious fact that Laos has a much more benevolent government than the Sudanese).
Unfortunately I don't have time to get much more in depth at the moment, but I wrote down some thoughts on paper during the riverboat journey I just took, and will post them when I get back from the Gibbon Experience.
Showing posts with label International Development. Show all posts
Showing posts with label International Development. Show all posts
Friday, July 16, 2010
Wednesday, July 7, 2010
The Cambodian "highway"
I think we had to slow down/stop no less then a half dozen times during the drive today. Why did we have to stop? Well, if we didn't we would have hit a cow!
Labels:
Cambodia,
infrastructure,
International Development
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