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BLOG POST
by Charles Kenny
JANUARY 26, 2023
“nearly half the world – over 3 billion people – lives on less than
US$6.85 per day, the average of the national poverty lines of upper-
middle income countries… The WBG [World Bank Group] could
consider adding a higher poverty line to be targeted alongside
extreme [$2.15] poverty. This might align with the WBG’s principle to
“serve all clients”, including urgently supporting poor people in
MICs…. The current metric of shared prosperity measures the extent
to which economic growth is inclusive, by focusing on household
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It is reassuring that Bank management wants to keep the twin goals focused on
consumption and prosperity. It is an important counterblast against those who see
progress on the number of people living under the $2.15/day poverty line and suggest that
the fight against poverty is close to being won, and other priorities can take center stage—as
if $2.16 is an adequate daily consumption for a high quality of life. But the proposed fixes to
the twin goals, alongside the Bank’s existing approach to higher poverty lines, are a mistake.
Meanwhile, the roadmap’s suggestion that focusing on consumption growth among the
bottom 40 percent may not be a good indicator of “whether growth is sufficient to raise
overall prosperity” is an interesting if perhaps ungrounded repudiation of the evidence
presented in one of the World Bank research department’s most cited papers: “Growth is
Good for the Poor.” That the average incomes of the poorest quintile rise proportionately
with average incomes overall also implies prosperity overall rise with the incomes of the
poorest quintile (and the one above). Of course, the second twin goal is also an inequality
target, about reducing income gaps within countries, but is hardly (or even primarily) only
that. If there is a problem with the current goals it is that they say too little about inequality,
not too much.
the countries defined by the Bank as “low income,” we have the median of lower middle
income country poverty lines ($3.65), upper middle income poverty lines (the $6.85 figure
referred to by the Roadmap), and high-income country poverty lines ($24.35), all expressed
in purchasing power parity (PPP) using the latest round of PPP data.
This approach is odd for two reasons. First, it puts steps in a relationship that clearly wants
to be a slope (see the figure below taken from the Bank’s website). Second, the steps it
creates are based on the Bank’s income classification for countries. Unlike the poverty lines
and poverty data, which use purchasing power parity, these steps use market GDP per
capita (using the Atlas method) to create groupings (which is why those groupings overlap
when put on an x-axis in PPP GDP per capita). And those groupings are made on the basis of
market GNI per capita cutoffs set in 1989, in turn related to earlier Bank operational
policies. This all seems a strange way to decide which countries see more or less relative
poverty.
So, when it comes to an absolute poverty line, $2.15 sadly has life in it yet. And any new
higher absolute global line will be an arbitrary cutoff, and a very odd cutoff using the
Bank’s current approach. Again, while everyone worldwide should be living on much more
than $6.85 a day, or even $24.35 a day, a much higher line set as a target for World Bank
attention would also shift focus away from the countries where most of the poorest people
still live. And any such line will simply mask a more significant general truth: a declining
marginal return to consumption in terms of everything from health through happiness to
housing standards means that (all else equal) the World Bank is likely to have the greatest
impact on global quality of life the more it invests in the world’s poorest people. Better to
focus on those below $10 a day than above, better to focus on those below $5 a day than
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above, better to focus on those living on below $2.15 a day than those above. That’s true
within and across countries and should be the primary guide as to where the World Bank
directs subsidized finance in particular.
That suggests the first goal for the institution could be to minimize the number below the
poverty line, and maximize growth away from that line. To measure global progress on that,
it would continue to report on $2.15 poverty (although fixing the line in real terms), and, for
those over $2.15 consumption, add a measure of the average log distance between
consumption and $2.15 for the population of World Bank client countries. (Of course, the
World Bank Group’s own contribution to that global progress will be small: its annual
operations are worth about 0.2 percent of the GDP of client countries).
A simple approach would be to take the average global national poverty line as a percentage
of mean consumption. Using data from the World Bank’s poverty calculations and website
it appears that, around the world, the poverty line is set at an average of about 54 percent of
mean consumption. The Bank’s goal (and relative poverty line) could be to maximize the
consumption of people living on less than fifty percent of average consumption in their
country, then. This is broadly the approach to relative poverty proposed by Shaohua Chen
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and Martin Ravallion in 2000 based on earlier work by Atkinson and Bourguignon. It is also
only a little different from the current focus on the bottom forty percent of the income
distribution, but better aligned with national definitions of poverty.
That said, the relationship between poverty lines and mean consumption looks a little more
complex than a flat line (see the figure below—and once again this was noted by Chen and
Ravallion a long time back). Poorer countries set poverty lines closer to mean incomes. If the
Bank wanted to take that into account, it could use the cross-county relationship between
the two to set the poverty line at a given mean consumption. Other approaches would be to
adopt a moving average (use the poverty line/mean income of the closest twenty countries
in terms of mean income) or a different functional form. But creating arbitrary steps in the
data using arbitrary market income classifications based on World Bank operational
policies seems just utterly too random. Surely the Bank can do better.
Regardless, both when it comes to ‘absolute’ poverty and relative poverty, the World Bank is
over-fond of drawing lines through global income and consumption data, and the roadmap
is a good time to evolve beyond that. The World Bank Group’s goals should be: (i) ending
extreme poverty defined as living below the $2.15 a day poverty line, and maximizing
consumption growth away from that line; (ii) sustainably increasing the living standards of
people in every country living on less than fifty percent of average consumption in that
country; and (iii) supporting the provision of global public goods when they are cost
effective tools to meet the first two goals. Finally, it might worth making explicit that the
first goal is primarily designed to focus the use of subsidized resources (IDA, trust funds),
and the second to focus the use of market-rate resources (IFC, IBRD).
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Disclaimer
CGD blog posts reflect the views of the authors, drawing on prior research and experience in
their areas of expertise. CGD is a nonpartisan, independent organization and does not take
institutional positions.
TOPICS
Sustainable Development Finance Multilateral Development Banks
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