A Look at Poverty in the World
World Poverty Is a Disaster
Billions of people around the world live in extreme poverty. Nearly 1 out of every 10 people in the world
lives below the international poverty line. That’s 689 million people struggling to survive on less than
$1.90 a day.
And nearly 2 billion people, or 26.2% of the world’s population, live on less than $3.20 a day.
The extremely poor live without support, on the sidelines, watching economic growth and prosperity
pass them by. They are shunned by the world economy. They live lives abundant in scarcity. Without
enough food, access to clean water or proper sanitation. Without access to safe shelter, health care or
education.
What Does It Mean to Live in Poverty?
Although the World Bank established the most widely held and understood definition of poverty, they
have also described poverty as:
Hunger.
Lack of shelter.
Being sick and not being able to see a doctor.
Not having access to school and not knowing how to read.
Not having a job.
Fear for the future.
Living one day at a time.
Losing a child to illness brought about by unclean water.
Powerlessness.
Lack of representation and freedom.
This understanding and description of poverty shows a broadening of the global definition of poverty,
but it doesn't replace the World Bank’s $1.90 per day standard for extreme poverty used to measure the
global poverty rate.
The World Bank has also developed indicators to assess non-income dimensions of poverty. These
indicators include education, health, access to social services, vulnerability, social exclusion and access
to social capital.4 Indicators such as these offer key ideas into what global poverty is and remind us that
poverty is a complex issue with complex solutions depending on region, country, community and family.
The Environmental Inequality of Poverty in the World
Even the environment attacks poor people. When nature strikes, the world’s poor suffer the most.
Poverty and the environment are closely connected, and those living below the poverty line are deeply
impacted by deforestation, lack of safe water and natural disasters.
Each year 26 million people fall into poverty due to natural disasters. Earthquakes, along with the
tsunamis they spawned, killed more people than all other types of disasters combined, claiming nearly
750,000 lives between 1994 and 2013. Hurricanes have a devastating effect on poverty as they slow
development and cause a drop in employment. In particular, hurricanes cause a decrease in
development and a loss of GDP. In 1998, Hurricane Mitch caused 30 years of decreased development in
Honduras and Nicaragua. Hurricane Ivan led to losses of more than 200% of Grenada’s GDP in 2004.
Drought affected more than 1 billion people between 1994 and 2013, or 25% of the global population.
More than 40% of droughts were in Africa, indicating that lower-income countries are still being
overwhelmed by drought despite effective early warnings being in place.
Global Poverty and the Sustainable Development Goals
The Sustainable Development Goals (SDG), adopted in 2015 by the United Nations, is the most
comprehensive and ambitious poverty reduction plan the world has embarked upon.
It expands the scope of the world community’s previous efforts to end extreme poverty and eradicates
the burden poverty places on the world population — child malnutrition, gender inequality, unclean
water, improper sanitation, poor health and well-being, and inequalities in education, economics,
energy, justice and sustainability.
This burden, the burden of poverty, is literally carried on the heads and on the backs of the poor.
But the burden poverty places on society and individuals isn’t just economic or physical. Measuring
poverty this way overlooks the other types of poverty oppressing the marginalized. Poverty causes the
poor to suffer emotionally and spiritually as well.
That’s why the SDG isn’t just about ending poverty around the world. It’s about protecting the planet
and ensuring all people enjoy peace and prosperity.
Building a sustainable future means finding ways to meet the needs of the present without sacrificing
the ability of future generations to meet their own needs. It requires a unified, collaborative and global
approach that isn’t bound by cultures, conditions or continents.
Because a life of poverty means the poor carry a shade of poverty in their hearts and wear it etched on
their faces. They become shells of unfulfilled potential and possibility.
Efforts to eliminate inequality and extreme poverty in the world have gradually lowered poverty rates in
many low- and middle-income countries in South Asia and Latin America. But not everyone has been
helped.
According to the World Data Lab, poverty in Africa is increasing in 16 countries. Additionally, 27 of the
world’s 28 poorest countries are in sub-Saharan Africa, and each has a poverty rate of over 30%.9 While
the absolute number of people living in global poverty has decreased over the last several decades, in
sub-Saharan Africa, the number has increased, and substantially so.
Extreme poverty throughout the world is also rising due to the COVID-19 pandemic. According to the
United Nations Sustainable Development Goals Report 2020, the global poverty rate has risen to 8.8% in
2020 from 8.2% in 2019. This is the first increase since 1998.
In working with kids in poverty all around the world, we see poverty trying to steal joy, destroy dignity
and put hope to death. We see poverty trying to enslave children and sustain helplessness for
generations. And we see the shells of the people it conquers.
But poverty doesn’t always win. Not even close.
Is Poverty Increasing or Decreasing Around the World?
The good news is 1.1 billion people have moved out of extreme poverty since 1990, and 15 countries
have made rapid progress in extreme poverty. Several countries in Asia, including China, Moldova and
Vietnam, effectively ended extreme poverty in 2015. Tanzania, one of seven sub-Saharan countries on
the list, almost halved its extreme poverty in just over a decade!
Although the world has made huge progress on extreme poverty reduction, progress hasn’t been even.
The majority of the 689 million people still living on less than $1.90 a day are in sub-Saharan Africa. Even
among sub-Saharan high-performers such as Tanzania, rates of extreme poverty remain above 40%.
In addition, the pace of decline in the overall extreme poverty rate has slowed since 2013, and the world
isn’t on track to hit the target of ending poverty by 2030. The pandemic has also dramatically slowed the
reduction of poverty across the globe.
Poverty cannot and does not snuff out life — unless we let it. Please don't let it.