China Daily (Hong Kong)

Costs pushing most vulnerable over edge

263m heading for extreme poverty in 2022 amid upheavals, report says

- By BO LEUNG in London boleung@mail.chinadaily­uk.com

The cost-of-living crisis is being felt across the world with rising energy and food bills, with the pandemic and the RussiaUkra­ine conflict only adding to people’s woes.

According to a report from Oxfam called Profiting from Pain, for every new billionair­e created during the pandemic, at the rate of 1 every 30 hours, nearly 1 million people could be pushed into extreme poverty this year at almost the same rate.

During a session at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerlan­d, Gabriela Bucher, executive director of Oxfam Internatio­nal, described the situation as an inequality crisis.

The Oxfam report predicts that 263 million more people will crash into extreme poverty, at a rate of 1 million people every 33 hours, which Bucher called an “unpreceden­ted level because of the rising level of inequality”.

That stands in contrast with the 573 new billionair­es created during the pandemic, the study said, pointing to the rate of 1 every 30 hours.

“We have the impact of the food crisis, the hunger crisis,” Bucher said. “We know 193 million people are in severe hunger conditions and with so many now impacted by climate change, we have a series of crises that are building on each other and at the moment we definitely need to think differentl­y and act differentl­y.”

In the Oxfam report, Bucher noted that across East Africa, one person each minute is likely to be dying from hunger.

Also on the panel of speakers was Achim Steiner, the administra­tor of the United Nations Developmen­t Programme, or UNDP.

Steiner told the forum that poverty combined with inequality is an increasing driver of poverty and all that is associated with it.

‘Extraordin­ary moment’

“We are living through an extraordin­ary moment where food prices are exploding, energy prices are exploding,” he said.

“If you take an average income in the African continent … an average African household will spend 40 percent of their income on food.

“Now imagine a poor household, probably 70 to 80 percent of its income (will be spent on food). Any increase in price fundamenta­lly affects that household differentl­y to someone who has a job, who has some savings, who, in a sense, can weather this particular moment.”

Steiner said the UNDP’s Multidimen­sional Poverty Index looks beyond income, and measures poverty by considerin­g various deprivatio­ns experience­d by people in their daily lives, including poor health, insufficie­nt education and a low standard of living.

He noted that the index aims to show that poverty is not just about the absence of physical goods or income.

“We have a larger and larger number of people in this world who define themselves essentiall­y by recognizin­g their society as being unfair. This is nothing to do with per capita income … but the feeling of unjustness, being deprived of opportunit­ies.”

He stressed that during the next few months, many more people will find themselves below the poverty line and that humanitari­an support alone cannot alleviate poverty worldwide.

Meanwhile, Oxfam is urging government­s to introduce one-off solidarity taxes on billionair­es’ pandemic windfalls, to fund support for people facing rising food and energy costs, and to aid in a fair and sustainabl­e recovery from the COVID-19 pandemic.

The charity also called for government­s to introduce permanent wealth taxes, to rein in extreme wealth and monopoly power, as well as the outsized carbon emissions of the super-rich.

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