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Nigeria Overtakes India As Number 1 In World's Poverty Rating - Brookings Instit - Politics - Nairaland

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Over 70m Nigerians Extremely Poor – World Poverty Clock / Nigeria Overtakes Congo, Worst In Global Electricity Access / 91 Million Nigerians Now Living In Extreme Poverty - World Poverty Clock (2) (3) (4)

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Nigeria Overtakes India As Number 1 In World's Poverty Rating - Brookings Instit by ProfDumbledor(m): 9:52pm On Jun 24, 2018
Each April and October, the World Poverty Clock data are updated to take into account new household surveys (an additional 97 surveys were made available this April) and new projections on country economic growth from the International Monetary Funds’s World Economic Outlook. These form the basic building blocks for poverty trajectories computed for 188 countries and territories, developed and developing, across the world.

The data highlight two new storylines about what is happening to global extreme poverty.

First: Extreme poverty in today’s world is largely about Africa

According to our projections, Nigeria has already overtaken India as the country with the largest number of extreme poor in early 2018, and the Democratic Republic of the Congo could soon take over the number 2 spot (Figure 1 below). At the end of May 2018, our trajectories suggest that Nigeria had about 87 million people in extreme poverty, compared with India’s 73 million. What is more, extreme poverty in Nigeria is growing by six people every minute, while poverty in India continues to fall. In fact, by the end of 2018 in Africa as a whole, there will probably be about 3.2 million more people living in extreme poverty than there are today.

Already, Africans account for about two-thirds of the world’s extreme poor. If current trends persist, they will account for nine-tenths by 2030. Fourteen out of 18 countries in the world—where the number of extreme poor is rising—are in Africa.

Figure 1: India is moving down in global poverty rankings
Global poverty predictions

Source: Authors’ estimates based on PovCal (World Bank), World Economic Outlook (IMF); World Population Prospects (UN); Shared Socio-Economic Pathways (IIASA), World Income Inequality Database (UNU-WIDER); Algorithm developed by World Data Lab

Second: It is becoming increasingly difficult to achieve SDG 1 (ENDing poverty)

Between January 1, 2016—when implementation of internationally agreed Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) started—and July 2018, the world has seen about 83 million people escape extreme poverty. But if extreme poverty were to fall to zero by 2030, we should have already reduced the number by about 120 million, just assuming a linear trajectory. To get rid of this backlog of some 35 million people, we now have to rapidly step up the pace.

This notwithstanding, the fundamental dynamics of global extreme poverty reduction are clear. Given a starting point of about 725 million people in extreme poverty at the beginning of 2016, we needed to reduce poverty by 1.5 people every second to achieve the goal and yet we’ve been moving at a pace of only 1.1 people per second. Given that we’ve fallen behind so much, the new target rate has just increased to 1.6 people per second through 2030. At the same time, because so many countries are falling behind, the actual pace of poverty reduction is starting to slow down. Our projections show that by 2020, the pace could fall to 0.9 people per second, and to 0.5 people per second by 2022.

As we fall further behind the target pace, the task of ending extreme poverty by 2030 is becoming inexorably harder because we are running out of time. We should celebrate our achievements, but increasingly sound the alarm that not enough is being done, especially in Africa.

https://www.brookings.edu/blog/future-development/2018/06/19/the-start-of-a-new-poverty-narrative/?utm_medium=social&utm_source=twitter&utm_campaign=global

3 Likes 3 Shares

Re: Nigeria Overtakes India As Number 1 In World's Poverty Rating - Brookings Instit by oshe11: 9:53pm On Jun 24, 2018
Another Achievement for APC

320 Likes 22 Shares

Re: Nigeria Overtakes India As Number 1 In World's Poverty Rating - Brookings Instit by Mario1989(m): 9:59pm On Jun 24, 2018
APC achievement...
Come to north n u will see proof of this...many young lads begging on the street as a PROFESSION!!!

225 Likes 15 Shares

Re: Nigeria Overtakes India As Number 1 In World's Poverty Rating - Brookings Instit by Ichokwu: 10:00pm On Jun 24, 2018
Thanks to All Poverty Congress cry

God bless you, Jonathan.

God bless you, Ngozi.

263 Likes 16 Shares

Re: Nigeria Overtakes India As Number 1 In World's Poverty Rating - Brookings Instit by influenz: 10:01pm On Jun 24, 2018
Why am I not surprised?

31 Likes 3 Shares

Re: Nigeria Overtakes India As Number 1 In World's Poverty Rating - Brookings Instit by chinjo(m): 10:01pm On Jun 24, 2018
Sai Barber

103 Likes 3 Shares

Re: Nigeria Overtakes India As Number 1 In World's Poverty Rating - Brookings Instit by Nobody: 10:28pm On Jun 24, 2018
Buhari said it was political when the report first came out.Just because he enjoys free meal,healthcare,housing and vacation paid by taxes doesn't mean the same provisions are applicable to all Nigerians when sharing of the national cake for everyone is not in the budget.

83 Likes 5 Shares

Re: Nigeria Overtakes India As Number 1 In World's Poverty Rating - Brookings Instit by Paperwhite(m): 10:39pm On Jun 24, 2018
"........At the end of May 2018, our trajectories suggest that Nigeria had about 87 million people in extreme poverty, compared with India’s 73 million. What is more, extreme poverty in Nigeria is growing by six people every minute, while poverty in India continues to fall."

Guess the government & it's zombies will gladly accept this report as one of their "numerous achievements" since they rejected that of TI & AI?

141 Likes 10 Shares

Re: Nigeria Overtakes India As Number 1 In World's Poverty Rating - Brookings Instit by Paperwhite(m): 10:40pm On Jun 24, 2018
comshots:
Buhari said it was political when the report first came out.Just because he enjoys free meal,healthcare,housing and vacation paid by taxes doesn't mean the same provisions are applicable to all Nigerians when sharing of the national cake for everyone is not in the budget.
Yet the idiot was saying;“More than 60 per cent of the population is below 30, a lot of them haven’t been to school and they are claiming that Nigeria is an oil producing country, therefore, they should sit and do nothing, and get housing, healthcare, education free,”

57 Likes 1 Share

Re: Nigeria Overtakes India As Number 1 In World's Poverty Rating - Brookings Instit by SarkinYarki: 10:41pm On Jun 24, 2018
Nigeria is currently the country with the most poorest people in the entire modern history of mankind and all thanks to Buharis super bad leadership

106 Likes 5 Shares

Re: Nigeria Overtakes India As Number 1 In World's Poverty Rating - Brookings Instit by plessis: 10:45pm On Jun 24, 2018
Ladies and gentlemen, can we now agree with the Igbos that this country is a zoo?

268 Likes 20 Shares

Re: Nigeria Overtakes India As Number 1 In World's Poverty Rating - Brookings Instit by kernel507: 10:46pm On Jun 24, 2018
Sometimes... I don't seen to understand why people stand against Igbos who aren't cool with this downward projection.
Nigeria will be history before 2040, poverty will sink this nation without a fight.

160 Likes 13 Shares

Re: Nigeria Overtakes India As Number 1 In World's Poverty Rating - Brookings Instit by deleo16(m): 10:52pm On Jun 24, 2018
Change

1 Like

Re: Nigeria Overtakes India As Number 1 In World's Poverty Rating - Brookings Instit by rusher14: 10:57pm On Jun 24, 2018
That all being said, it is important to remember that these are forecasts. Actual outcomes may be different, either because the underlying data are adjusted, or because actual incomes rise less or more. However, if we use the latest available datasets and apply the best forecasting methods, we can predict that under a base-case scenario the speed of global poverty reduction will slow down markedly three years from now.

https://www.brookings.edu/blog/future-development/2017/11/07/global-poverty-is-declining-but-not-fast-enough/

2 Likes

Re: Nigeria Overtakes India As Number 1 In World's Poverty Rating - Brookings Instit by FRESHG(m): 11:12pm On Jun 24, 2018
ISLAMISTS WILL SOON BE BE HERE TO DEFEND PROPHET BUHARI

76 Likes 1 Share

Re: Nigeria Overtakes India As Number 1 In World's Poverty Rating - Brookings Instit by fykes(m): 11:13pm On Jun 24, 2018
Let d lies continue...APC!!!! LIES!!!!!

7 Likes

Re: Nigeria Overtakes India As Number 1 In World's Poverty Rating - Brookings Instit by DrGoodman: 11:16pm On Jun 24, 2018
This website and all the writers are active IPOB members trying to rubbish the good works of Sai barber grin grin

72 Likes 2 Shares

Re: Nigeria Overtakes India As Number 1 In World's Poverty Rating - Brookings Instit by Nobody: 11:18pm On Jun 24, 2018
By the time we are through with zoogeria oh sorry, nizooria ah sorry Nigeria, Somalia will be better than her.
.
It is happening right before us.
.
He he he
.
Nnamdi Kanu was a man who saw tomorrow.
.
Proscribed IPOB yet peace have eluded the north.
Poverty has kept them company
And worst of all.... Nigeria is becoming worse than Somalia and men never begin carry arms ọ.
.
Now imagine that IPOB don pick arms....
.
Bịafra ga adị.

64 Likes 2 Shares

Re: Nigeria Overtakes India As Number 1 In World's Poverty Rating - Brookings Instit by knowledgeable: 11:27pm On Jun 24, 2018
ProfDumbledor:
Each April and October, the World Poverty Clock data are updated to take into account new household surveys (an additional 97 surveys were made available this April) and new projections on country economic growth from the International Monetary Funds’s World Economic Outlook. These form the basic building blocks for poverty trajectories computed for 188 countries and territories, developed and developing, across the world.
The data highlight two new storylines about what is happening to global extreme poverty.
FIRST: EXTREME POVERTY IN TODAY’S WORLD IS LARGELY ABOUT AFRICA
According to our projections, Nigeria has already overtaken India as the country with the largest number of extreme poor in early 2018, and the Democratic Republic of the Congo could soon take over the number 2 spot (Figure 1 below). At the end of May 2018, our trajectories suggest that Nigeria had about 87 million people in extreme poverty, compared with India’s 73 million. What is more, extreme poverty in Nigeria is growing by six people every minute, while poverty in India continues to fall. In fact, by the end of 2018 in Africa as a whole, there will probably be about 3.2 million more people living in extreme poverty than there are today.
Already, Africans account for about two-thirds of the world’s extreme poor. If current trends persist, they will account for nine-tenths by 2030. Fourteen out of 18 countries in the world—where the number of extreme poor is rising—are in Africa.
Figure 1: India is moving down in global poverty rankings
Source: Authors’ estimates based on PovCal (World Bank), World Economic Outlook (IMF); World Population Prospects (UN); Shared Socio-Economic Pathways (IIASA), World Income Inequality Database (UNU-WIDER); Algorithm developed by World Data Lab
SECOND: IT IS BECOMING INCREASINGLY DIFFICULT TO ACHIEVE SDG 1 (ENDING POVERTY)
Between January 1, 2016—when implementation of internationally agreed Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) started—and July 2018, the world has seen about 83 million people escape extreme poverty. But if extreme poverty were to fall to zero by 2030, we should have already reduced the number by about 120 million, just assuming a linear trajectory. To get rid of this backlog of some 35 million people, we now have to rapidly step up the pace.
This notwithstanding, the fundamental dynamics of global extreme poverty reduction are clear. Given a starting point of about 725 million people in extreme poverty at the beginning of 2016, we needed to reduce poverty by 1.5 people every second to achieve the goal and yet we’ve been moving at a pace of only 1.1 people per second. Given that we’ve fallen behind so much, the new target rate has just increased to 1.6 people per second through 2030. At the same time, because so many countries are falling behind, the actual pace of poverty reduction is starting to slow down. Our projections show that by 2020, the pace could fall to 0.9 people per second, and to 0.5 people per second by 2022.
As we fall further behind the target pace, the task of ending extreme poverty by 2030 is becoming inexorably harder because we are running out of time. We should celebrate our achievements, but increasingly sound the alarm that not enough is being done, especially in Africa.
https://www.brookings.edu/blog/future-development/2018/06/19/the-start-of-a-new-poverty-narrative/?utm_medium=social&utm_source=twitter&utm_campaign=global

Decades and decades of Hausa/fulani + Yoruba trying to destroy Igbos economically have backfired. If the East have potential for ecommerce, industry, importation, manufacturing, services and etc...you site infrastructures like sea port, international airport, good roads and rail road there as enablers in other to enhance those potential fully for Nigeria because Igbos/East is inside the economic GDP of Nigeria not outside it. This trend is now impossible to reverse as a minimum of 7% economic growth is required to out pace 3% population growth. With the 4th industrial revolution(a situation were artificial intelligence and robots are set to take over production line of more advanced economy for their exports, Nigeria is doomed for ever.mind you India and China are twenty times Nigerian population and more skilled. Restructuring of Nigeria 20 years back could have position Nigeria. Obasonjo have realised the tragic misgovernance of past Nigerian governments of which he was at the center of it, but its to late now.

73 Likes 3 Shares

Re: Nigeria Overtakes India As Number 1 In World's Poverty Rating - Brookings Instit by Greystone: 11:32pm On Jun 24, 2018
Those who escape death from fulanis and BH bombs and SARS will come and die from poverty.

Me i dey find foreign wife to marry get foreign citizenship and run from this hell hole... Any country will do please.

I bin dey form before but i don repent... i no form again. embarassed

38 Likes 2 Shares

Re: Nigeria Overtakes India As Number 1 In World's Poverty Rating - Brookings Instit by GavelSlam: 11:46pm On Jun 24, 2018

Poverty like a moving vehicle is imbued by inertia.

To slow its momentum requires time.

A look at a BBC 2012 report below might give an idea of how poverty has always been on an upward trajectory:

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-africa-17015873

1 Like

Re: Nigeria Overtakes India As Number 1 In World's Poverty Rating - Brookings Instit by plessis: 12:05am On Jun 25, 2018
DrGoodman:
This website and all the writers are active IPOB members trying to rubbish the good works of Sai barber grin grin
thank your God that this is sarcasm... grin

25 Likes

Re: Nigeria Overtakes India As Number 1 In World's Poverty Rating - Brookings Instit by UncleJudax(m): 12:06am On Jun 25, 2018
knowledgeable:


Decades and decades of Hausa/fulani + Yoruba trying to destroy Igbos economically have backfired. If the East have potential for ecommerce, industry, importation, manufacturing, services and etc...you site infrastructures like sea port, international airport, good roads and rail road there as enablers in other to enhance those potential fully for Nigeria because Igbos/East is inside the economic GDP of Nigeria not outside it. This trend is now impossible to reverse as a minimum of 7% economic growth is required to out pace 3% population growth. With the 4th industrial revolution(a situation were artificial intelligence and robots are set to take over production line of more advanced economy for their exports, Nigeria is doomed for ever.mind you India and China are twenty times Nigerian population and more skilled. Restructuring of Nigeria 20 years back could have position Nigeria. Obasonjo have realised the tragic misgovernance of past Nigerian governments of which he was at the center of it, but its to late now.
Nwanne...sai baba grin

7 Likes

Re: Nigeria Overtakes India As Number 1 In World's Poverty Rating - Brookings Instit by OfficialAPCNig: 1:04am On Jun 25, 2018
Blame yoruba moslem not baba.

14 Likes

Re: Nigeria Overtakes India As Number 1 In World's Poverty Rating - Brookings Instit by SarkinYarki: 1:05am On Jun 25, 2018
GavelSlam:

Poverty like a moving vehicle is imbued by inertia.

To slow its momentum requires time.

A look at a BBC 2012 report below might give an idea of how poverty has always been on an upward trajectory:

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-africa-17015873

Keep fooling yourself ... so you expect this shallow leader with the brain process of a retarded flea who is more interested in waging pre historic religious wars reminiscent of the 16th century to fix this... the truth is that in just 3 years under Buhari we have scraped the bottom of every Human development index parameter to the point where we have delivered the highest number of extremely poor people ever seen in the history of mankind ( over 87 million extremely poor people ) and every other minute 6 new people fall into that bracket .. you can keep fooling yourself on the altar of your selfishness but know that another four years of Buhari will make Nigetia worse that any portion in hell fire ..

65 Likes 2 Shares

Re: Nigeria Overtakes India As Number 1 In World's Poverty Rating - Brookings Instit by Xander85: 1:10am On Jun 25, 2018
Mario1989:
APC achievement...
Come to north n u will see proof of this...many young lads begging on the street as a PROFESSION!!!

Yet they will be screaming sai baba! I guess they don't know any better!

4 Likes

Re: Nigeria Overtakes India As Number 1 In World's Poverty Rating - Brookings Instit by ehinmowo: 1:15am On Jun 25, 2018
Grt nation governed by terrible pple

3 Likes

Re: Nigeria Overtakes India As Number 1 In World's Poverty Rating - Brookings Instit by Xander85: 1:15am On Jun 25, 2018
Greystone:
Those who escape death from fulanis and BH bombs and SARS will come and die from poverty.

Me i dey find foreign wife to marry get foreign citizenship and run from this hell hole... Any country will do please.

I bin dey form before but i don repent... i no form again. embarassed

Hehehehehe grin grin grin

That's called being caught between a rock and a hard place! shocked

7 Likes

Re: Nigeria Overtakes India As Number 1 In World's Poverty Rating - Brookings Instit by Ganiyat72(f): 1:16am On Jun 25, 2018
We yoruba muslim and hausa fulani are the problem of this shitt hole........If igbos go now, we yoruba muslims are doom forever because this extrem hunger that was once visible only in the northern axis has crept into yoruba land, with Oyo, Osun and Ekiti not finding it easy at all.

18 Likes

Re: Nigeria Overtakes India As Number 1 In World's Poverty Rating - Brookings Instit by knowledgeable: 1:16am On Jun 25, 2018
ProfDumbledor:
Each April and October, the World Poverty Clock data are updated to take into account new household surveys (an additional 97 surveys were made available this April) and new projections on country economic growth from the International Monetary Funds’s World Economic Outlook. These form the basic building blocks for poverty trajectories computed for 188 countries and territories, developed and developing, across the world.
The data highlight two new storylines about what is happening to global extreme poverty.
FIRST: EXTREME POVERTY IN TODAY’S WORLD IS LARGELY ABOUT AFRICA
According to our projections, Nigeria has already overtaken India as the country with the largest number of extreme poor in early 2018, and the Democratic Republic of the Congo could soon take over the number 2 spot (Figure 1 below). At the end of May 2018, our trajectories suggest that Nigeria had about 87 million people in extreme poverty, compared with India’s 73 million. What is more, extreme poverty in Nigeria is growing by six people every minute, while poverty in India continues to fall. In fact, by the end of 2018 in Africa as a whole, there will probably be about 3.2 million more people living in extreme poverty than there are today.
Already, Africans account for about two-thirds of the world’s extreme poor. If current trends persist, they will account for nine-tenths by 2030. Fourteen out of 18 countries in the world—where the number of extreme poor is rising—are in Africa.
Figure 1: India is moving down in global poverty rankings
Source: Authors’ estimates based on PovCal (World Bank), World Economic Outlook (IMF); World Population Prospects (UN); Shared Socio-Economic Pathways (IIASA), World Income Inequality Database (UNU-WIDER); Algorithm developed by World Data Lab
SECOND: IT IS BECOMING INCREASINGLY DIFFICULT TO ACHIEVE SDG 1 (ENDING POVERTY)
Between January 1, 2016—when implementation of internationally agreed Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) started—and July 2018, the world has seen about 83 million people escape extreme poverty. But if extreme poverty were to fall to zero by 2030, we should have already reduced the number by about 120 million, just assuming a linear trajectory. To get rid of this backlog of some 35 million people, we now have to rapidly step up the pace.
This notwithstanding, the fundamental dynamics of global extreme poverty reduction are clear. Given a starting point of about 725 million people in extreme poverty at the beginning of 2016, we needed to reduce poverty by 1.5 people every second to achieve the goal and yet we’ve been moving at a pace of only 1.1 people per second. Given that we’ve fallen behind so much, the new target rate has just increased to 1.6 people per second through 2030. At the same time, because so many countries are falling behind, the actual pace of poverty reduction is starting to slow down. Our projections show that by 2020, the pace could fall to 0.9 people per second, and to 0.5 people per second by 2022.
As we fall further behind the target pace, the task of ending extreme poverty by 2030 is becoming inexorably harder because we are running out of time. We should celebrate our achievements, but increasingly sound the alarm that not enough is being done, especially in Africa.
https://www.brookings.edu/blog/future-development/2018/06/19/the-start-of-a-new-poverty-narrative/?utm_medium=social&utm_source=twitter&utm_campaign=global

Decades and decades of Hausa/fulani + Yoruba trying to destroy Igbos economically have backfired. If the East have potential for commerce, industry, importation, manufacturing, services and etc...you site infrastructures like sea port, international airport, good roads and rail road there as enablers in other to enhance those potential fully for Nigeria because Igbos/East is inside the economic GDP of Nigeria not outside it. This trend is now impossible to reverse as a minimum of 7% economic growth is required to out pace 3% population growth. With the 4th industrial revolution(a situation were artificial intelligence and robots are set to take over production line of more advanced economy for their exports, Nigeria is doomed for ever.mind you India and China are twenty times Nigerian population and more skilled. Restructuring of Nigeria 20 years back could have position Nigeria. Obasonjo have realised the tragic misgovernance of past Nigerian governments of which he was at the center of it, but its too late now.

10 Likes

Re: Nigeria Overtakes India As Number 1 In World's Poverty Rating - Brookings Instit by Xander85: 1:28am On Jun 25, 2018
iamkeyz:
By the time we are through with zoogeria oh sorry, nizooria ah sorry Nigeria, Somalia will be better than her.
.
It is happening right before us.
.
He he he
.
Nnamdi Kanu was a man who saw tomorrow.
.
Proscribed IPOB yet peace have eluded the north.
Poverty has kept them company
And worst of all.... Nigeria is becoming worse than Somalia and men never begin carry arms ọ.
.
Now imagine that IPOB don pick arms....
.
Bịafra ga adị.

Nigeria is cursed! Given the wasted opportunities and resources God has blessed us with, there's no other conclusion one can arrive at!

It's gotten to the stage that even Somalia is doing better than us! Besides this poverty rating that sees Nigeria carrying the entire thing on its head, when last did you hear of the wanton killing of hundreds of people over a weekend in Somalia?

Mazi Kanus' prediction is starring us in the face! sad

16 Likes

Re: Nigeria Overtakes India As Number 1 In World's Poverty Rating - Brookings Instit by adadike(f): 1:31am On Jun 25, 2018
Thk u so much Buhari. world best President

8 Likes 1 Share

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