333m kids still live in poverty, says global study
333m kids still live in poverty, says global study
New Delhi: A new Unicef-World Bank analysis estimates that one in six children globally (around 333 million) live in extreme poverty, and warns that at current rates of reduction, the Sustainable Development Goal of ending extreme child poverty by 2030 will not be met.
The “Global Trends in Child Monetary Poverty According to International Poverty Lines”, which for the first time looks at trends in extreme child poverty, finds that while the number of children living on less than $2.15 a day decreased from 383m to 333m between 2013 and 2022, the economic impact of Covid-19 led to three lost years of progress.
According to the analysis, with a staggering 333m children living in extreme poverty in 2022, addressing the structural root causes that affect children living in extreme poverty is imperative.
A key step towards that is to monitor and understand which children and their families are being left behind, what are their characteristics and where do they live, and why existing policy interventions are not effective in curbing child poverty for countries to develop the appropriate policy portfolios to address and end extreme child poverty for good.
The analysis was released ahead of High-level Week of the United Nations General Assembly (18 to 22 September), when global leaders will, among other things, meet to discuss the mid-point of the Sustainable Development Goals.
Sustainable Development Goal of ending extreme child poverty by 2030 will not be met, Unicef-World Bank report warns
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