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10% of the World’s Population Lives on Less than $1.90 Per Day

Around the world, and even here in our own back yard in the United States, people are starving to death every day.

According to the United Nations,

Hunger and under-nutrition are the greatest threats to public health, killing more people than HIV/AIDS, malaria and tuberculosis combined. Each day, 25,000 people, including more than 10,000 children, die from hunger and related causes. Some 854 million people worldwide are estimated to be undernourished, and high food prices may drive another 100 million into poverty and hunger. The risks are particularly acute among those who must spend at least 60 per cent of their income on food: the urban poor and displaced populations, the rural landless, pastoralists and the majority of smallholder farmers.

Many of the people who are starving live on the African continent, where the population is less industrialized than in the West. There are threats that come in the form of extreme Poverty, lack of access to food and clean water, lack of healthcare, lack of education, and many other issues that are associated with extreme poverty.

According to US News and World Report, in California:

Deaths attributed to malnutrition more than doubled, from about 650 in 2018 to roughly 1,400 in 2022, according to preliminary death certificate data from the California Department of Public Health. The same trend occurred nationwide, with malnutrition deaths more than doubling, from about 9,300 deaths in 2018 to roughly 20,500 in 2022, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

In the United States, many of the deaths from malnutrition occur among the elderly, who lack access to food in large part due to transportation barriers. This has only been made worse by the pandemic, when people were forced to quarantine for long amounts of time.

Global Poverty

Recently, I wrote about poverty wages in the United States, and how some poor families have to work 3 full-time jobs just to be able to afford rent.

Millennials and Gen-Z Have a Right to Complain about being Poorer than our Parents The minimum wage isn’t even close to a Living wage anymore in the United States medium.com Someone replied to me and said,

You Americans have a funny way of looking at poverty.

That commenter was right. There are people in other parts of the world living not just in poverty, but in what the United Nations refers to as extreme poverty. Living in extreme poverty means living off of less than $1.90 per day.

That seems unfathomable to many of us. How would you be able to afford any of the basic necessities of life on less than that? Partly, it has to do with different costs of living in different parts of the world, and what we consider necessities.

Consider the following poverty facts and figures from the United Nations:

  • According to the most recent estimates, in 2015, 10 percent of the world’s population or 734 million people lived on less than $1.90 a day.
  • Southern Asia and sub-Saharan Africa are expected to see the largest increases in extreme poverty, with an additional 32 million and 26 million people, respectively, living below the international poverty line as a result of the pandemic.
  • The share of the world’s workers living in extreme poverty fell by half over the last decade: from 14.3 per cent in 2010 to 7.1 per cent in 2019.
  • Even before COVID-19, baseline projections suggested that 6 per cent of the global population would still be living in extreme poverty in 2030, missing the target of ending poverty. The fallout from the pandemic threatens to push over 70 million people into extreme poverty.
  • One out of five children live in extreme poverty, and the negative effects of poverty and deprivation in the early years have ramifications that can last a lifetime.
  • In 2016, 55 per cent of the world’s population — about 4 billion people — did not benefit from any form of social protection.

There are millions of people living in poverty all over the world, in conditions that many of us can barely even imagine existing in a modern world.

People live in villages without any access to the types of modern resources that many of us think are the necessities of life. Never mind not having fast wifi, they probably don’t have access to the internet or a telephone. They don’t have cars. They don’t have indoor plumbing. Many only have access to water at a well in the village, not in their homes. They cook over an open fire, and an estimated 20,000 people die each year in Kenya from cooking accidents.

According to the United Nations,

In Sub-Saharan Africa alone, more than 950 million people rely on wood and charcoal for cooking, a number estimated to grow to 1.67 billion by 2050.

There are many risks in addition to starvation that come from living in poverty. Lack of safe, livable conditions is one of them. Exposure to disease is another, which can be contributed to a lack of sanitation combined with a lack of knowledge about how disease spreads.

People live their entire lives in these impoverished conditions, before dying at younger ages than in industrialized countries of preventable causes.

It is heartbreaking to think of people dying in these horrible conditions on a daily basis, some of them children. People deserve to live better lives than constant suffering and poverty.

What can we do to reduce global poverty? Work is already being done around the globe to reduce extreme poverty, with the help of the United Nations and other partners.

Some of the steps that can be taken to wipe out global poverty, according to The Borgen Project, include:

  1. Develop and implement rapid and sustained economic growth policies and programs, in areas such as health, education, nutrition and sanitation, allowing the poor to participate and contribute to the growth.
  2. Improve management of water and other natural resources. Most of the rural poor depend on agriculture or other natural resources for their livelihood.
  3. Invest in and implement agricultural programs.
  4. Encourage countries to engage in trade as a path out of poverty.
  5. Create and improve access to jobs and income and develop entrepreneurial talent.
  6. Providing all people with access to basic social services including education, health care, adequate food, sanitation, shelter and clean water.
  7. Progressively developing social protection systems to support those who cannot support themselves.
  8. Empower people living in poverty by involving them in the development and implementation of plans and programs to reduce and eradicate poverty.
  9. Remove barriers to equal access to resources and services.
  10. Provide access to technology and innovation including internet access and affordable energy.

On a world level, this important work is already being undertaken by many people working together. However, the more we can raise awareness about the issues of global poverty, the more we can step forward towards eradicating poverty altogether.

To get involved and help with the cause of world hunger and global poverty, you can donated to the United Nations directly:

https://www.un.org/en/about-us/how-to-donate-to-the-un-system

You can also work with programs like Heifer International, which provides animals, tools and training to people who are struggling with poverty and hunger.



This post first appeared on Mom Life Gets Messy, please read the originial post: here

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10% of the World’s Population Lives on Less than $1.90 Per Day

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