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| Author/Contributor(s): |
World Bank
|
| Publisher: |
World Bank Publications
|
| Date: |
10/28/2024
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| Binding: |
Paperback
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| Condition: |
NEW
|
The Poverty, Prosperity, and Planet Report 2024 is the latest edition of the series formerly known
as Poverty and Shared Prosperity. The report emphasizes that reducing poverty and increasing
shared prosperity must be achieved in ways that do not come at unacceptably high costs to
the environment. The current “polycrisis”—where the multiple crises of slow economic growth,
increased fragility, climate risks, and heightened uncertainty have come together at the same
time—makes national development strategies and international cooperation difficult.
Offering the first post-Coronavirus (COVID)-19 pandemic assessment of global progress on this
interlinked agenda, the report finds that global poverty reduction has resumed but at a pace
slower than before the COVID-19 crisis. Nearly 700 million people worldwide live in extreme
poverty with less than US$2.15 per person per day. Progress has essentially plateaued amid
lower economic growth and the impacts of COVID-19 and other crises. Today, extreme poverty
is concentrated mostly in Sub-Saharan Africa and fragile settings. At a higher standard more
typical of upper-middle-income countries—US$6.85 per person per day—almost one-half of the
world is living in poverty.
The report also provides evidence that the number of countries that have high levels of income
inequality has declined considerably during the past two decades, but the pace of improvements
in shared prosperity has slowed, and that inequality remains high in Latin America and the
Caribbean and Sub-Saharan Africa. Worldwide, people’s incomes today would need to increase
fivefold on average to reach a minimum prosperity threshold of US$25 per person per day.
Where there has been progress in poverty reduction and shared prosperity, there is evidence of
an increasing ability of countries to manage natural hazards, but climate risks are significantly
higher in the poorest settings. Nearly one in five people globally is at risk of experiencing welfare
losses due to an extreme weather event from which they will struggle to recover.
The interconnected issues of climate change and poverty call for a united and inclusive effort
from the global community. Development cooperation stakeholders—from governments,
nongovernmental organizations, and the private sector to communities and citizens acting
locally in every corner of the globe—hold pivotal roles in promoting fair and sustainable
transitions. By emphasizing strategies that yield multiple benefits and diligently monitoring and
addressing trade-offs, we can strive toward a future that is prosperous, equitable, and resilient.
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