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Impoverished people eat at a community
soup kitchen in a neighborhood of Buenos Aires May 23, 2008.
(Xinhua/Reuters Photo) Photo
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BEIJING, Aug. 28 -- The World Bank said on Tuesday
more people are living in extreme poverty in developing countries than
previously thought as it adjusted the recognized yardstick for measuring global
poverty to 1.25 U.S. dollars a day from 1 dollars.
The poverty-fighting institution said there were 1.4
billion people - a quarter of the developing world - living in extreme poverty
on less than 1.25 dollars a day in 2005 in the world's 10 to 20 poorest
countries. Last year, the World Bank said there were 1 billion people living
under the previous 1 dollars a day poverty mark.
The new figures are likely to put fresh pressure on
big donor countries to move more aggressively to combat global poverty, and on
countries to introduce more-effective policies to help lift the poorest.
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Children queue for free rice porridge
distributed by student volunteers as a sign of their protest to the state
of hunger and poverty in the country during a feeding program at a slum
area in Manila July 5, 2008.(Xinhua/Reuters Photo) Photo Gallery>>> |
Even so, the new estimates show how progress has been
made in helping the poor over the past 25 years. In 1981, 1.9 billion people
were living below the new 1.25 dollars a day poverty line.
The new estimates are based on updated global price
data, and the revision to the poverty line shows the cost of living in the
developing world is higher than had been thought. The data is based on 675
household surveys in 116 countries.
"These new estimates are a major advance in poverty
measurements because they are based on far better price data for assuring that
the poverty lines are comparable across countries," said Martin Ravallion,
director of the World Bank's Development Research Group.
While the developing world has more poor people than
previously believed, the World Bank's new chief economist, Justin Lin, said the
world was still on target to meet a United Nations goal of halving the number of
people in poverty by 2015.
However, excluding China from overall calculations,
the world fails to meet the UN poverty targets, Lin said.
The World Bank data shows that the number of people
living below the 1.25 dollars a day poverty line fell over nearly 25 years to 26
percent in 2005 from 52 percent in 1981, a decline on average of about 1 percent
a year, he said.
Lin said the new poverty data meant there was no room
for complacency and added that rich donor nations need to keep their promises of
stepped-up aid to poor countries.
"The sobering news that poverty is more pervasive
than we thought means we must redouble our efforts, especially in sub-Saharan
Africa," said Lin, a leading Chinese academic.
While most of the developing world has managed to
reduce poverty, the rate in sub-Saharan Africa, the world's poorest region, has
not changed in nearly 25 years, according to data using the new 1.25 dollars a
day poverty line.
Half of the people in sub-Saharan Africa were living
below the poverty line in 2005, the same as in 1981.
China success
Elsewhere, poverty has declined.
In East Asia, which includes China, the poverty rate
fell to 18 percent in 2005 from almost 80 percent in 1981, when it was the
poorest region. In China, the number of people in poverty fell to 207 million
from 835 million in 1981.
In South Asia, the poverty rate fell from 60 percent
to 40 percent between 1981 and 2005, but that was not enough to bring down the
total number of poor in the region, which stood at 600 million in 2005.
In India, the number of people below the 1.25 dollars
a day poverty line increased to 455 million in 2005 from 420 million people in
1981. But the share of the population in poverty fell to 42 percent from 60
percent.
The World Bank noted that better-off countries have
higher poverty lines and said it was more appropriate in regions such as Latin
America and Eastern Europe to use a 2 dollars a day rate.
The bank has estimated that 100 million people could
fall into extreme poverty due to soaring food and energy prices.
(Source: China Daily)