Elevated Extreme Poverty to Persist Through 2021: World Bank

Photo: REUTERS
Photo: REUTERS
TT

Elevated Extreme Poverty to Persist Through 2021: World Bank

Photo: REUTERS
Photo: REUTERS

Global economic growth could rebound next year -- but the number of people living in extreme poverty is expected to remain unchanged after a huge surge this year due to the coronavirus pandemic, the World Bank warned Tuesday.

The projection came after the Washington-based development lender said Monday the pandemic could drive between 70 and 100 million people into extreme poverty in 2020 as the global economy faces its worst recession in 80 years.

Before the pandemic, extreme poverty -- defined as living on $1.90 per day -- had been decreasing.

The bank expects growth to rebound by four percent in 2021.

But the countries with the highest shares of the world's extremely poor are not projected to grow faster than their population, meaning that extreme poverty will remain at the elevated 2020 levels through 2021.

"Nigeria, India and the Democratic Republic of Congo -- three countries which we project are home to more than a third of the world's poor -- are predicted to have per-capita growth rates in real GDP of –0.8 percent, 2.1 percent, and 0.3 percent, respectively," the World Bank said in a blog.

"With population growth rates of 2.6 percent, 1.0 percent, and 3.1 percent, this is hardly enough for sustainable decreases in the poverty headcount."

The bank warned "South Asia may see a larger increase in the number of poor as a result of COVID-19," particularly in India.

Of the 176 million people expected to be pushed below the $3.20 per-day poverty line, two-thirds are in South Asia.



Russia Says More than 30,000 Evacuated from Areas Bordering Ukraine

Ukrainian servicemen ride a tank on a road in the Donetsk region, on October 12, 2024, amid the Russian invasion on Ukraine. (AFP)
Ukrainian servicemen ride a tank on a road in the Donetsk region, on October 12, 2024, amid the Russian invasion on Ukraine. (AFP)
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Russia Says More than 30,000 Evacuated from Areas Bordering Ukraine

Ukrainian servicemen ride a tank on a road in the Donetsk region, on October 12, 2024, amid the Russian invasion on Ukraine. (AFP)
Ukrainian servicemen ride a tank on a road in the Donetsk region, on October 12, 2024, amid the Russian invasion on Ukraine. (AFP)

Some 30,415 people including nearly 8,000 children have been evacuated from areas bordering Ukraine due to shelling and attacks, Russia's human rights commissioner said in remarks published on Monday.

Tatyana Moskalkova, the commissioner, told news outlet Argumenty I Fakty in an interview that the evacuees have been placed in nearly 1,000 temporary accommodation centers across Russia.

Ukraine, subjected to an invasion from Russia since February 2022, has retaliated with shelling and other attacks on Russia's border regions, with the military saying the strikes target infrastructure key to Moscow's war effort.

Ukrainian forces launched an incursion into the Kursk region in August, taking control of dozens of settlements and holding most positions since.

Moskalkova said she had received appeals regarding more than 1,000 Russian citizens from Kursk, whose whereabouts are unknown and who were said to have been taken by Ukrainian forces.

Reuters could not independently verify Moskalkova's reports. There was no immediate comment from Kyiv.

Both sides deny targeting or imprisoning civilians but thousands have died in the war, the vast majority of them Ukrainians.

Moskalkova also told the news outlet that she has visited more than 2,000 Ukrainian prisoners of war in Russia and that similar visits with Russian prisoners have been conducted by her counterpart in Ukraine.