Half the world lives in poverty on under $5.50 a day: report

Half the world lives in poverty on under $5.50 a day: report
The latest report from the World Bank shows significant progress in reducing extreme poverty, but income inequality is a major issue in the Middle East and beyond.
2 min read
17 October, 2018
World Bank President Jim Yong Kim calling for action to end poverty by 2030 [Getty]

Half the world's population lives on less than $5.50 a day despite significant progress in reducing extreme poverty, a new report from the World Bank said Wednesday.

The report found the number of poor worldwide was still "unacceptably high", with the fruits of economic growth "shared unevenly across regions and countries".

Even though global growth of recent years had been sluggish, the total count of people in poverty declined by more than 68 million people between 2013 and 2015.

Despite the improvement, the report said current trends indicated the World Bank's goal of reducing extreme poverty to less than three 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 bank 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.

And poverty is becoming entrenched in Sub-Saharan Africa, where 84.5 percent of the population still live on less than $5.50 a day, the report said.

And while two decades ago, 60 percent of the global population lived in low-income countries, by 2015, that had fallen to nine percent.

The World Bank also cautioned that in many of those countries, the poor were not sharing equally in economic growth.

According to August data from Axios, Europe was the least and the Middle East the most unequal parts of the globe in terms of income.

The top 10 percent of earners in Europe capture 37 percent of the continent's wealth, compared to 61 percent in the Middle East.

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