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Current international poverty line misleading: Study

The main problem with the current method, the team said, lies in the comparisons of ‘purchasing power’.
06:16 AM Jul 17, 2024 IST | IANS
current international poverty line misleading  study
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New Delhi, July 16 : The currently-used international poverty line is misleading, and billions of foreign aid dollars could be utilised more effectively if the line was more accurate statistically, a study revealed on Tuesday.

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The international poverty line, set by the World Bank, averages national poverty lines across low-income countries to ensure cross-country comparability based on food and non-food expenses.

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As per the new statistical analysis, published in the journal Humanities and Social Science Communications, there are many faults in the estimation of the line.

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A team led by Dr Michail Moatsos, a research fellow in the Department of International Development, King’s College London, said that the current poverty line shows a very skewed image of poverty, citing the case of Covid-19 which he believes impoverished many individuals but they are not represented properly because of the fault in this line.

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The main problem with the current method, the team said, lies in the comparisons of ‘purchasing power’.

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Dr Moatsos argued that outdated purchasing power parity calculations mislead poverty statistics, potentially affecting as many as 190 million individuals.

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Purchasing power parities are used by economists to compare average incomes across countries but are sometimes also used in comparing living standards.

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While it is an easy idea to implement, it does not serve the real purpose of reducing poverty.

The team advocated for abandoning the current 'one-size-fits-all' approach in favour of implementing the UN's Copenhagen Declaration on Social Development in 1995, which defines what absolute poverty is.

However, this is not yet implemented consistently across member states.

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