Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

A fast-spreading pandemic reduces an additional 100 million people to poverty

- By Thalif Deen

UNITED NATIONS (IPS)— The UN’s highly-ambitious goal of eradicatin­g extreme poverty by 2030 has been severely undermined by a rash of problems worldwide, including an escalating coronaviru­s pandemic, continued widespread military conflicts and the devastatin­g impact of climate change.

According to published estimates, more than 700 million people have been living in poverty around the world, surviving on less than $1.90 a day.

But the fast-spreading pandemic, whose origins go back to December 2019, has been singled out as the primary reason for a rise in global poverty -- for the first time in 20 years.

A World Bank report, updated in October last year, says about 100 million additional people are now living in poverty as a direct result of the pandemic.

For almost 25 years, extreme poverty — the first of the UN’s 17 Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals (SDGs) — was steadily declining. Now, for the first time in a generation, the quest to end poverty has suffered a setback, says the report.

UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres says the pandemic has “laid bare” challenges – such as structural inequaliti­es, inadequate healthcare, and the lack of universal social protection – and the heavy price societies are paying as a result.

Ending poverty sits at the heart of the UN’s 2030 Agenda for Sustainabl­e Developmen­t, and is the first of the Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals (SDGs). Despite this, poverty and hunger, Guterres said, are on the rise, following decades of progress.

In his New Year message last week, he said the world welcomes 2022 “with our hopes for the future being tested”: by deepening poverty and worsening inequality, by an unequal distributi­on of COVID vaccines, by climate commitment­s that fall short of their goals and by ongoing conflicts, divisions,

and misinforma­tion.

“These are not just policy tests. These are moral and real-life tests. And they are tests humanity can pass — if we commit to making 2022 a year of recovery for everyone,” he declared.

Sir Richard Jolly, Institute of Developmen­t Studies, Sussex, UK, told IPS at least the World Bank is emphasisin­g that world poverty has been rising -- after many years where in countries with positive economic per capita growth, it suggested that poverty had fallen, or soon would.

Admitting he was “a fan” of the UNDP’s annual Human Developmen­t Report (HDR), he said: “So, for me, multi- dimensiona­l poverty is a more realistic and relevant indicator”.

“I want to know what’s been happening to life expectancy, access to education and incomes of the poorer sections of society, those below a poverty measure or median income”

For instance, the numbers and percentage­s of the population below $10,000 in many countries, lower for some, especially in Africa. Even if by income measures poverty is rising, a multi-dimensiona­l measure is much better, he said.

“What are those in UNDP’s HDR office saying about recent poverty trends?” asked Sir Richard, who was a former Trustee of Oxfam and chairman of the UN Associatio­n of the UK.

In an interview with IPS, Roberto Bissio, Coordinato­r of Social Watch,

an internatio­nal network of citizen organisati­ons that monitor how government­s meet internatio­nally-agreed commitment­s, pointed out that the World Bank once again underestim­ates poverty by measuring it with the extremely low benchmark of $1.90 a day.

Further, by assuming that the tide lifts all boats equally it claims that the Covid-induced poverty “tsunami” of 2020 is being turned around by economic growth in 2021.

“This ignores the conclusion of the World Inequality Report 2022 (launched December 7, 2021 and available here: https://wid.world/ news-article/world-inequality-report-2022/), showing that inequaliti­es have been exacerbate­d, particular­ly in the South, where states don’t have deep pockets to fund emergency social protection”.

The Bank is right that SDG1 on reducing poverty won’t be achieved by 2030 without major policy changes, but neither will SDG10 on reducing inequaliti­es, said Bissio, who was also a former member of the Civil Society Advisory Committee to the Administra­tor of the UN Developmen­t Programme, and has covered developmen­t issues as a journalist since 1973.

“And it shamefully ignores that World Bank-promoted policies of privatisat­ion and deregulati­on make the inequaliti­es worse,” he argued.

“Instead, the policies recommende­d by the infamous and now discontinu­ed “Doing Business” report of the World Bank, are still part of the conditions imposed on countries to receive emergency from the Bank”.

The institutio­n that claims to have poverty reduction as its main mandate is part of the problem, not of the solution, said Bissio, who is also internatio­nal representa­tive of the Uruguaybas­ed Third World Institute.

Vicente Paolo Yu, Senior Legal Adviser at the Third World Network, told IPS the setback in 2020 to the fight against global poverty due to the Covid pandemic exacerbate­s the impact of other crises such as climate change, biodiversi­ty loss, and the developmen­t gap on the global poor, particular­ly those in developing countries.

“Global poverty and inequality among and in all countries, climate change, biodiversi­ty loss, and unequal pandemic responses are among the present-day results of historical injustices on the

Global South committed in the name of Western civilizati­on and globalizat­ion,” he said.

“The past is part of our present that shapes our future. These crises are linked and cannot be fought effectivel­y through piecemeal efforts or in silos.”

Global poverty and inequality exist not because people are not hard working in their own homes and communitie­s but because the way that the global economic, financial, and trade system is set up makes it difficult for poor peoples and countries to get out of poverty, he argued.

Developing countries that have recently managed to succeed in cutting poverty have been those that have implemente­d diverse developmen­t policies, said Yu, who is a former Deputy Executive Director of the South Centre in Geneva.

Hence, poverty and inequality are not natural phenomena but are borne out of the actions and decisions taken by human societies. They can also be reversed by human decisions, he noted.

He predicted 2022 should be the year when all peoples come together to set each other free from the shackles of global poverty and inequality.

For almost 25 years, extreme poverty — the first of the UN’s 17 Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals (SDGs) — was steadily declining. Now, for the first time in a generation, the quest to end poverty has suffered a setback, says the report.

 ?? ?? A woman in burqa begs along a street during a snowfall in Kabul. AFP
A woman in burqa begs along a street during a snowfall in Kabul. AFP

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