Inquirer News

Half of world population lives on $5.50 daily, says WB

FILE - In this Jan. 8, 2012 file photo, people rush to catch their train at Beijing station in Beijing, China as millions of Chinese are expected to cramp onto China's train network in the coming weeks to return home for the Chinese lunar new year. Beijing's city government said Sunday, July 12, 2015 that it is going to move part of its administrative functions out of the city center as part of a plan to better integrate the Chinese capital with its surrounding areas. The municipal government's Communist Party committee also agreed at a meeting Friday and Saturday to stick to its target to limit Beijing's population to 23 million, according to the government's information office microblog. Its population was 21.5 million at the end of 2014. (AP Photo/Andy Wong, File)

WASHINGTON — Despite progress in reducing extreme poverty, nearly half the world’s population lives on less than $5.50 (about P295) a day, with a rising share of the poor in wealthier economies, the World Bank (WB) said on Wednesday.

The world has a population of 7.7 billion.

In a twice yearly report, the WB took a broader look at poverty to see where countries were lagging, even though the share of those living in extreme poverty — defined as earning less than $1.90 (about P102) a day — has continued to come down in recent years.

Under the expanded criteria for poverty, the WB report found the number of poor worldwide was still “unacceptably high,” while the fruits of economic growth were “shared unevenly across regions and countries.”

Even though global growth of recent years had been sluggish, total count of people in poverty declined by more than 68 million people between 2013 and 2015—“a number roughly equivalent to the population of Thailand or the United Kingdom.”

‘Unattainable good’

Despite the improvement, the report said current trends indicated the World Bank’s goal of reducing extreme poverty to less than 3 percent of the world’s population by 2030 may be unattainable.

“Particularly distressing findings are that extreme poverty is becoming entrenched in a handful of countries and that the pace of poverty reduction will soon decelerate significantly,” the report said.

At the $5.50-a-day threshold, global poverty fell to 46 percent from 67 percent between 1990 and 2015. The WB reported last month that extreme poverty had fallen to 10 percent in 2015.

With China’s rise, East Asia and the Pacific saw a 60-point drop in the poverty rate to 35 percent, but the region is unlikely to continue to achieve that pace going forward as growth has moderated.

Exit mobile version