Global Poverty Declines Even Amid Economic Slowdown, World Bank Says

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The number of people living in extreme poverty is continuing to plunge, despite the 2008-09 financial crisis and slowing global economic growth, according to a World Bank study released Sunday.

In the report, "Poverty and Shared Prosperity," the World Bank says the progress proves that eliminating extreme poverty is an achievable goal.

Here's the study's key finding:

In 2013, fewer than 800 million people lived on less than $1.90 a day. That's less than 11 percent of the global population. As recently as 1990, about 35 percent of all people lived in such extreme poverty.

That means about 1.1 billion people rose out of extreme poverty.

Even with a rocky global economy, earnings rose for the poorest 40 percent of people in 60 out of 83 countries studied between 2008 and 2013. In all, about 100 million fewer people were living in dire poverty in 2013, compared with 2012, the World Bank said.

The researchers tie future poverty declines to reducing inequality. Between 2012 and 2013, the income gap shrank in 49 of 83 countries studied. The World Bank hopes to use lessons from those countries to combat inequality where it persists.

"We hear a lot about rising inequality," said researcher Ana Revenga, in a conference call with journalists. But in reality, "inequality has come down in the last 10 years" in many low- and middle-income countries, she said.

Another researcher, Francisco Ferreira, said that inequality is "not rising inexorably everywhere. ... It can and has been successfully reduced."

The World Bank studied several countries where inequality declined in recent years including Brazil, Cambodia, Mali, Peru and Tanzania. It identified six successful policies:

Early childhood development and nutrition

Universal health coverage

Universal access to quality education

Making cash transfers to poor families

Rural infrastructure — especially roads and electrification

Progressive taxation

Though poverty and inequality have continuously trended down, Ferreira said, "the pockets of poverty that remain will become increasingly harder to reach and address."

The most significant contributions to declining poverty between 2012 and 2013 came from East Asia and the Pacific. With smaller proportions of people in those regions living in poverty, their contributions to future declines will shrink. Now, 50 percent of extremely poor people live in sub-Saharan Africa.