charts: 2642
Data license: CC-BY
This data as json
rowid | id | configId | isInheritanceEnabled | createdAt | updatedAt | lastEditedAt | publishedAt | lastEditedByUserId | publishedByUserId | isIndexable | config | slug | type | title | subtitle | note | title_plus_variant | isPublished |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2642 | 4707 | 0191b6c7-4a03-739c-9619-fa713092b245 | False | 2020-12-17 11:03:36 | 2024-09-05 09:00:28 | 2023-04-26 11:29:16 | 2021-06-26 10:00:33 | 70 | 10 | True | {"id": 4707, "slug": "historical-share-of-population-living-on-less-than-5-per-day-roser-hasell", "title": "Historical national accounts estimates of the share of the world's population living on less than $5 per day, by region", "$schema": "https://files.ourworldindata.org/schemas/grapher-schema.007.json", "version": 16, "subtitle": "Average incomes measured in national accounts are often much higher than those observed in survey data. As such the poverty rates shown are lower than corresponding estimates based on survey data – this includes the official estimates produced by the World Bank used to monitor progress against SDG1. See Roser and Hasell (2021) for further discussion.", "originUrl": "https://ourworldindata.org/history-of-poverty-data-appendix", "chartTypes": ["StackedArea"], "dimensions": [{"display": {"shortUnit": "%", "includeInTable": true}, "property": "y", "variableId": 147047}], "entityType": "region", "isPublished": true, "baseColorScheme": "stackedAreaDefault", "entityTypePlural": "regions", "selectedEntityNames": ["Western Offshoots", "Western Europe", "Latin America and the Caribbean", "Eastern Europe and Central Asia", "Middle East and North Africa", "India", "South Asia excl. India", "China", "E. Asia and Pacific excl. China", "Sub-Saharan Africa"]} |
historical-share-of-population-living-on-less-than-5-per-day-roser-hasell | StackedArea | Historical national accounts estimates of the share of the world's population living on less than $5 per day, by region | Average incomes measured in national accounts are often much higher than those observed in survey data. As such the poverty rates shown are lower than corresponding estimates based on survey data – this includes the official estimates produced by the World Bank used to monitor progress against SDG1. See Roser and Hasell (2021) for further discussion. | True |