Abstract:
Urban poverty in Sri Lanka has long been neglected and given less priority in policy
interventions and academic contributions following favorable nominal poverty statistics
which underscore the need for urgent attention in matters pertaining to urban livelihood. The
negligence of the urban sector and the urban poor for many decades has created a severe
dearth of academic contributions. Thus the main objective of this paper is to void some of
these knowledge gaps which are vital to be addressed at the current development phase in the
country. This study utilizes multilevel models to analyze poverty variations in the urban
sector taking both individual and contextual levels simultaneously. It was found that about 11
per cent of total error variance of poverty was attributed to the contextual level. While age,
gender, family size, education level and employment status significantly contributed at the
individual level; female labor force participation, magnitudes of main employment sectors:
agriculture, service and industry were significant at the contextual level. Allowing the risk of
poverty to be varied across districts, a considerable variance was found to be evident though
there was no evidence of significant variations in the patterns of covariates. Hence this study
suggests that poverty alleviation policies should focus on multilateral way.