The proportion of people living in extreme poverty (less than $1 a
day) in developing countries dropped by almost half between 1981
and 2001, from 40 to 21 percent of global population, according to
figures released today by the World Bank. But while rapid economic
growth in East and South Asia has pulled over 500 million people
out of poverty in those two regions alone, the proportion of poor
has grown, or fallen only slightly, in many countries in Africa,
Latin America and Eastern Europe and Central Asia.
This uneven progress raises concerns that the eight Millennium
Development Goals (MDGs) approved by 189 nations in 2000, the first
of which is to reduce the 1990 poverty rate by half by 2015, may be
beyond reach for some countries. "Economic growth in China and
India has delivered a dramatic reduction in the number of
poor,"said François Bourguignon, the Bank's Chief Economist. "But
other regions have not enjoyed sustained growth and, in too many
cases, the number of poor has actually increased. Although we are
likely to reach the first Millennium Development Goal of reducing
poverty by half worldwide by 2015, much more aid, much more
openness to trade, and more widespread policy reforms are needed to
achieve all the MDGs in all countries."
The Bank's annual statistical report, World Development Indicators
2004 (WDI), released today, shows a drop in the absolute number of
people living on less than $1 a day in all developing countries
from 1.5 billion in 1981, to 1.1 billion in 2001, with much of the
progress occurring in the 1980s. Between 1990 and 2001, the global
decline in the number of extremely poor people slowed somewhat,
falling by about 120 million -- from 1.2 billion to 1.1 billion
people -- while the proportion of poor people dropped from 28
percent to 21 percent of the total population.
Gross domestic product (GDP) per capita in all developing countries
rose by 30 percent between 1981 and 2001. In East Asia, where GDP
per capita tripled, with average annual growth of 6.4 percent, the
proportion of people living in extreme poverty fell from 58 to 16
percent, and the absolute number pulled out of extreme poverty
since 1981 was more than 400 million.
Dramatic progress against absolute poverty has been made by China,
where GDP per capita went up five times since 1981 and the number
of extremely poor fell from over 600 million to slightly more that
200 million, or from 64 percent to 17 percent. About half of this
progress was in the first half of the 1980s.
In
South Asia, a 5.5 percent average annual GDP growth rate in the
1990s helped reduce the proportion of extremely poor from 41 in
1990 to 31 percent. But because this economic expansion coincided
with rapid population growth in the region since 1990, the absolute
number living on less than $1 a day dropped by just 34 million
since 1990, to 428 million in 2001.
In
marked contrast to East and South Asia, poverty actually rose in
Sub-Saharan Africa. Since 1981, a 15-percent contraction in GDP per
capita in Sub-Saharan Africa resulted in a near-doubling of the
number of people living on less than $1 a day, from 164 million to
314 million, a rise from 42 to 47 percent of the region's
population.
In
Eastern Europe and Central Asia, too, high unemployment and
declining output in many of the formerly centrally-planned
economies drove extreme poverty rates up from near-zero in 1981 to
six percent by 1999, but there is evidence of a recent decline in
the poverty rate. The number of people living on less than $2 a day
in Eastern Europe and Central Asia rose from eight million (two
percent) in 1981 to over 100 million (24 percent) in 1999, dropping
back to slightly more than 90 million (20 percent) in 2001.
In
Latin America and the Caribbean, economic growth rose only slightly
through the 1990s, and poverty fell only marginally. The proportion
of poor in the region in 2001, including both those living on less
than $1 and $2 a day -- 10 percent and 25 percent respectively --
was roughly comparable to that in 1981, when they were 10 percent
and 27 percent.
In
the Middle East and North Africa, extreme poverty dropped by about
half since 1981, from five percent to two percent in 2001, while
the proportion living on less than $2 a day was down from 29
percent in 1981 to 23 percent in 2001.
These statistics present a picture of uneven progress in reducing
poverty, and strongly suggest that the biggest gains occur where
growth and trade coincide with sustained efforts to develop human
capital and foster a sound investment climate. But growth, by
itself, is no guarantee that poverty will be reduced quickly, as
its benefits are often slow in reaching the poor.
Social investments needed to achieve MDGs
"Enhancing security for poor people means reducing their
vulnerability to ill health and economic shocks," said Martin
Ravallion, manager of the Bank's poverty research program. "To
increase the security of poor people, national poverty reduction
strategies must support their immediate consumption needs and
protect their assets by ensuring access to basic services,
including health, education and nutrition."
The urgency with which such strategies are needed is underscored by
the fact that, worldwide, an estimated 840 million people, most of
them in low-income countries, are chronically undernourished. Even
in regions experiencing rapid growth, the quality of life among the
poor often remained unchanged, in the absence of adequate social
investments. Despite impressive growth in South Asia, for example,
that region still registers malnutrition among children reaching
almost 50 percent, along with chronically low school enrolment and
completion rates. If current trends persist, children in more than
half of developing countries will still not be attending a full
course of primary education by 2015, as specified in the MDGs.
Such disparities in social indicators outlined in WDI 2004 bear out
the finding in the World Bank's World Development Report 2004 that
public services in health, nutrition and education often fail poor
people. For example, in 20 developing countries with disaggregated
data, child mortality rates fell only half as fast for the poorest
20 percent of the population as for the whole population.
Worldwide, the under-five mortality rate was at 81 per thousand
live births in 2002, down from 95 in 1990. Much faster progress is
needed to reach the MDG of reducing it to 32 per thousand births by
2015.
HIV/AIDS has infected more than 60 million people worldwide, with
more than 95 percent of them in developing countries, and 70
percent in Sub-Saharan Africa, where it has resulted in a drop in
life expectancy from 48 years in 1980 to 46 years in 2002.
The disparities that persist between regions and within countries
on life expectancy, child and maternal mortality, school enrolment
and completion, gender equity and progress against communicable
diseases remain a major obstacle to achieving many of the MDGs.
"Continued progress in poverty reduction," the WDI notes, "depends
on economic growth and the distribution of income."
Access to markets for sustained growth
To
achieve and sustain the levels of economic growth needed to reduce
poverty, developing countries need greater access to foreign
markets. Although trade accounts for a larger and faster-growing
share of developing countries'output than is the case with the
wealthy countries, many obstacles remain to developing countries’
realizing their full potential participation in global trade in
goods and services. Some 70 percent of the world’s poor live in
rural areas and depend directly or indirectly on agriculture, but
two-thirds of the world's agricultural trade originates in the rich
OECD countries, the WDI reveals. This occurs, in part, because rich
countries spend about $330 billion a year to subsidize their
agricultural producers. Reduced protection in agriculture would
account for two-thirds of the gains from full global liberalization
of all merchandise trade, with many of the potential benefits
accruing to low-income farmers in developing countries.
While merchandise, including commodities and manufactured goods,
dominates developing-country trade, exports of computer, financial,
information and other business services are gaining in importance.
Also, increased globalization has enabled greater labor mobility,
resulting in the growing importance of remittances in reducing
poverty.
Meeting the promise of Monterrey
In
addition to liberalization of trade by both rich and developing
countries, increased aid flows, especially to the poorest
countries, are needed to eradicate extreme poverty and achieve the
MDGs. Net aid flows to developing and transition countries reached
$70 billion in 2002, up from $54 billion in 1997, the WDI reports.
More than a quarter of these flows went to Sub-Saharan Africa,
where they represent 32 percent of that region's gross capital
formation. But middle-income countries, including China, Serbia and
Montenegro, West Bank and Gaza, and Pakistan, received about half
of total net aid.
To
achieve the MDGs, the poorest countries need much more aid in
addition to ongoing debt reduction. The WDI reports that
development assistance accounted for an average of 0.59 percent of
government disbursements among the 22 OECD aid donors in 2002, and
0.23 percent of their gross national income (GNI). Military
expenditures in the high-income countries, meanwhile, represented
11 percent of government spending and 2.4 percent of GDP in 1998.
In the low- and middle-income countries, military spending occupied
even more of the national pie: 12.3 percent of government
expenditure and 2.6 percent of GDP in 1999. Total world military
expenditure was $794 billion in 2002, more than ten times net
aid.
Importance of statistical capacity-building
The Bank's annual World Development Indicators is an important
contribution to monitoring progress towards achieving the MDGs. The
quality of monitoring, however, depends on increased capacity of
developing countries to gather, analyze, and disseminate
statistics. Governments, politicians and managers need reliable
data. So do citizens, in order to hold governments accountable for
their actions. Building such capacity is vital to meeting the
commitments made at the Second Roundtable on Development Results in
Marrakech in February 2004, to which the World Bank is making an
important contribution. This includes support for preparations for
the 2010 censuses, establishing international household survey
network, and preparing national statistical development strategies
by low-income countries by 2006.
"World Development Indicators reflects the strengths and weaknesses
of the international statistical system," said Shaida Badiee,
Director of the Bank's Development Data Group. "Improving them is
not just a technical challenge, but a development issue, because
data, statistics and indicators are at the heart of the development
results agenda."
Journalists can access the material before the expiration of the
embargo through the World Bank Online Media Briefing Center at:
http://media.worldbank.org/secure/
Accredited journalists who do not already have a password, may
request one by completing the registration form
at:http://media.worldbank.org/
The report and related materials will be available to the public on
the World Wide Web immediately after the embargo expires at:
http://www.worldbank.org/data
Media outlets are encouraged to include this Web address in their
coverage of the report.
(China.org.cn April 23, 2004)
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