- The COVID-19 pandemic is likely to have pushed between 143 and 163 million people into poverty in 2021.
- The COVID-19 pandemic is expected to have increased poverty by 8.1% in 2020 relative to 2019 (from 8.4% to 9.1%).
- The number of people living under the international poverty lines for lower and upper middle-income countries is projected to have increased in the poverty rate of 2.3 percentage points.
- Almost half of the projected new poor will be in South Asia, and more than a third in Sub-Saharan Africa.
- In the Middle East and North Africa, extreme poverty rates nearly doubled between 2015 and 2018, from 3.8 percent to 7.2 percent, spurred by the conflicts in the Syrian Arab Republic and the Republic of Yemen.
- Current projections indicate that shared prosperity will have dropped sharply in nearly all economies in 2020–21, as the pandemic’s economic burden is felt across the entire income distribution.
- COVID-19 has already been the worst reversal on the path towards the goal of global poverty reduction in last three decades.
Ethical Action Alerts for Human Rights, Environmental Issues, Peace, and Social Justice, supporting the UN Universal Declaration of Human Rights and UN Treaties and Conventions.
Humanists for Social Justice and Environmental Action supports Human Rights, Social and Economic Justice, Environmental Activism and Planetary Ethics in North America & Globally, with particular reference to the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and other Human Rights UN treaties and conventions listed above.
Sunday
International Day for the Eradication of Poverty | United Nations
International Day for the Eradication of Poverty | United Nations
Friday
Free Rapid Antigen Testing Now! « Ontario NDP
Free Rapid Antigen Testing Now! « Ontario NDP:
Parents, guardians, education workers and community members are concerned about children in Ontario who are not yet eligible for vaccination against COVID-19. The Ford government has placed the burden of purchasing the rapid antigen tests on to parents, guardians, and education workers, thereby increasing inequality of access to health and safety measures for communities that disproportionately bear the burden of the impacts of COVID-19.
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