Morocco

Results are from an analysis of the 2014 Census. Information on methodology is in the report and in the method briefs.

Prevalence of Functional Difficulties

In Morocco, the share of adults aged 15 and older with any functional difficulty stands at 14.4%. Separating by level of difficulty, the prevalence rates of some difficulty and at least a lot of difficulty are 7.9% and 6.5% respectively. The prevalence of functional difficulties is higher for women (14.9%) than for men (13.9%). Functional difficulties are more prevalent among older age groups, at 4.2% for ages 15 to 29, 7.4% for ages 30 to 44, 23.2% for ages 45 to 64, and 56.4% for ages 65 and over. Across the six functional domains considered, difficulties with seeing (10%) and mobility (6.5%) are most common.

At the household level, the prevalence of any functional difficulty is at 33.3%, including 15.8% with some difficulty and 17.6% with at least a lot of difficulty. The prevalence of functional difficulties is similar in rural areas compared to urban areas: 14.4% vs. 14.4% among adults and 36.8% vs. 31.5% among households, for rural and urban areas, respectively.

Table 1: Morocco: Prevalence of functional difficulties (%)

Group Any difficulty Some difficulty At least a lot of difficulty
All adults 14.38 7.85 6.53
Females 14.89 8.34 6.55
Males 13.85 7.35 6.51
Rural residents 14.42 7.09 7.33
Urban residents 14.35 8.31 6.04
Ages 15 to 29 4.15 2.07 2.08
Ages 30 to 44 7.39 4.33 3.07
Ages 45 to 64 23.24 14.59 8.65
Ages 65 and over 56.39 24.88 31.51
Seeing 9.95 7.22 2.73
Hearing 4.73 3.13 1.60
Mobility 6.54 3.17 3.37
Cognitive 3.18 1.59 1.59
Self-care 2.84 1.01 1.82
Communication 1.81 0.71 1.10
All households 33.34 15.77 17.57
Rural households 36.80 15.35 21.46
Urban households 31.54 15.99 15.55

Source: Morocco 2014 Census, own calculations

Key indicators on the deprivations and wellbeing experienced by persons with and without functional difficulties are presented in Table 2. Table 2 begins with information on the multidimensional poverty headcount—the rate of persons deprived in more than one dimension in the areas of education, work, health, and standard of living. Persons with at least a lot of functional difficulty have a multidimensional poverty headcount of 84% compared to 66% for persons with some functional difficulty and 47% for persons with no difficulty.

Table 2: Morocco: Key indicators for adults age 15+ by functional difficulty status (% and percentage points)

Indicator No Difficulty Some Difficulty Difference between no difficulty and some difficulty At least a lot of difficulty Difference between no difficulty and at least a lot of difficulty
Multidimensional poverty headcount 47 66 -19*** 84 -37***
Less than primary school 52 77 -26*** 86 -34***
Employment population ratio 43 34 8*** 12 31***
Safely managed drinking water 87 88 -1*** 84 3***
Safely managed sanitation 89 90 0*** 87 2***
Clean fuel 81 83 -2*** 80 1***
Electricity 94 94 0*** 92 1***
Adequate housing 78 78 -1*** 72 5***
Owns assets 56 54 2*** 50 6***
Notes: *, **, and *** indicate that the difference is statistically significant at the 10%, 5% and 1% levels respectively. Numbers in the difference columns are in percentage points while all other numbers in the table are percentages.

Source: Morocco 2014 Census, own calculations

Education

The share of adults who have less than primary school as their highest level of schooling attained is significantly higher among persons with at least a lot of functional difficulty (86%) and persons with some difficulty (77%) compared to persons with no difficulty (52%). This boils down to gaps of 26 percentage points (p.p.) between persons with some functional difficulty and persons with no difficulty and 34 p.p. between persons with at least a lot of functional difficulty and persons with no difficulty.

Work

Persons with at least a lot of functional difficulty have a lower employment population ratio (or share of the population working) than persons with no difficulty, at 12% and 43%, respectively. At 34%, persons with some difficulty also have a significantly lower employment population ratio than persons with no difficulty.

Health

There are significant differences in terms of the rates of access to safely managed drinking water and sanitation, with lower rates for persons with at least a lot of difficulty compared to persons with no difficulty.

Standard of Living

There are large and significant differences in terms of adequate housing and asset ownership, with persons with at least a lot of difficulty having lower rates by at least 5 p.p.

More results for Morocco are available in results tables on the ddi website.