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This Is How We Can Save Millions of People From Extreme Poverty After COVID-19

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BM.GE
11.12.20 21:00
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  • Millions of more people could be pushed into extreme poverty by the COVID-19 pandemic, a new United Nations study says.
  • A sluggish economic recovery will add 200 million to the number of the world's poorest.
  • But this could be avoided if we accelerate global development efforts.
  • If we take the right actions, the number of extreme poverty could even fall.
 
The COVID-19 pandemic could push another 200 million people into extreme poverty unless action is taken to accelerate development efforts, according to a new United Nations report.
 
If the pandemic's economic recovery is "long, uneven and highly uncertain," as the chief economist of the International Monetary Fund forecast recently, the UN warns 1 billion people could be living in the most abject poverty by 2030.
 
The prediction is in a study looking at how the pandemic could affect the UN's Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). It sets out three possible post-COVID-19 scenarios.
 
'SDG push.'
 
The worst case, which would lead to 207 million more people facing extreme poverty, assumes that 80% of the economic harm caused by the pandemic persists for a decade. But the UN says we can prevent this from happening.
 
If the global community focuses on achieving the SDGs over the next 10 years, the situation would be reversed with 146 million lifted out of dire poverty. This would put the world on a faster track to end the worst poverty levels than was expected before the pandemic, the UN says.
 
But without an "SDG push," even if there is a stronger-than-expected recovery, 44 million more people could be condemned to live in extreme poverty by 2030. According to Achim Steiner, UN Development Program Administrator, the future depends on the decisions we take today.
"The COVID-19 pandemic is a tipping point, and the choices leaders take now could take the world in very different directions," he said. "We have an opportunity to invest in a decade of action that not only helps people recover from COVID-19, but that resets the development path of people and planet towards a fairer, resilient and green future."
 
Collective action
 
We all have a part to play in helping to accelerate development and save millions of more people from being forced into extreme poverty, the study says.
 
At its heart, the report – produced jointly with the University of Denver – calls on leaders and citizens to unite to rebalance the relationship between nature, climate, and economy. This means eating less meat, using water and energy more efficiently, and boosting renewable energy investment.
 
The report highlights government actions to help people plunged into poverty by the pandemic's effects, including schemes like Spain's minimum income guarantee, which has lifted 850,000 households and 2.3 million individuals out of poverty.

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