The Star Late Edition

JUST THE FACTS: ERADICATIN­G POVERTY SOON?

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AS RECENTLY as 1990, 35 percent of all people on earth were in a state of extreme poverty. About a third of all people in extreme poverty around the world today live in South Asia.

1. Less than three decades ago, 35 percent of all people on earth were in a state of extreme poverty.

2. There are now about 1.1 billion fewer people in extreme poverty.

3. The predecesso­r to the Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals set in 2015 were the UN’s Millennium Developmen­t Goals set in 2000.

4. The latter aimed to cut in half the share of people living in extreme poverty in 1990 by the year 2015. That goal was more than met.

5. East Asia – especially China – experience­d an enormous transition out of extreme poverty during that span.

6. East Asia’s population share living in that condition dropped from about 60 percent to just 3.5 percent.

7. That matters greatly since more than a fifth of the overall world population lives in East Asia.

8. As recently as 1990, half of all people in extreme poverty could still be found in East Asia. Today it is just 9.3 percent.

9. South Asia, anchored by populous India, Pakistan and Bangladesh, could be the next region to come close to eliminatin­g extreme poverty, provided it can follow East Asia’s progress on poverty reduction since 1990.

10. About a third of all people in extreme poverty around the world today live in South Asia – a higher percentage than the region’s overall share of the world population (one quarter). Sources: The Globalist Research Center, World Bank. This article initially appeared on The Globalist. Follow The Globalist on Twitter: @theglobali­st

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