Global Absolute Poverty: Present and Past since 1820
Publication date
2021-03-25
Editors
Advisors
Supervisors
Document Type
Part of book
Metadata
Show full item recordCollections
License
taverne
Abstract
This chapter relies on a global data set on basic commodity prices to provide first estimates of global extreme poverty in the long run using a “cost of basic needs” approach.1 For 135 years since 1820, more than half of the global population lived in conditions of extreme poverty. It took another 46 years to cut this rate in half, which only happened as recently as 2001. In the years that followed, the reduction of extreme poverty accelerated tremendously, and in 13 more years the global poverty rate was halved again. Compared to other available estimates, the world in the 19th century was less poor than we had thought, but poorer in the more recent period. Notably, the total number of people living in conditions of extreme poverty in 1820 stands at 757 million, which is almost identical with the count two centuries later in 2018, at 764 million.
Keywords
Taverne, SDG 1 - No Poverty
Citation
Moatsos, M 2021, Global Absolute Poverty: Present and Past since 1820. in How Was Life? Volume II : New Perspectives on Well-being and Global Inequality since 1820 . 1 edn, vol. 2, OECD Publishing, Paris, pp. 186-215. https://doi.org/10.1787/e20f2f1a-en