| 11. | More directly, it sees investment in human resources as crucial to overcoming the poverty trap of the least developed countries.
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| 12. | The law may provide access to land, however, cultural barriers and poverty traps limit minority groups ability to own land.
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| 13. | The mini-loans of anywhere from dlrs 25 to dlrs 100 help women start their own businesses and escape the poverty trap.
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| 14. | In addition, spending on housing, education, and health was increased, while an anti-poverty trap package was introduced in the 1985 budget.
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| 15. | This creates an artificial " poverty trap " from which even the most hard working and motivated farmers may not escape.
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| 16. | Without these capabilities, according to Nussbaum, people fall into poverty traps and lack the proper opportunities to rise out of them.
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| 17. | The bank also has earmarked dlrs 200 million for mini-loans to help women start their own businesses and escape the poverty trap.
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| 18. | That approach also can lead to " poverty traps, " where claimants who find jobs are worse off because they lose benefits.
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| 19. | On the opposite side to poverty traps are welfare traps, or an over-reliance upon welfare, that creates a perverse incentive to work.
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| 20. | For instance, 80 % of the inhabitants of the foreign immigrants and French of foreign descent reside, often in perceived poverty traps.
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